Frontiers in Neurology (May 2022)

A Microanalysis of Mood and Self-Reported Functionality in Stroke Patients Using Ecological Momentary Assessment

  • Saskia D. Forster,
  • Siegfried Gauggel,
  • Rebecca Loevenich,
  • Volker Völzke,
  • Axel Petershofer,
  • Petra Zimmermann,
  • Caroline Privou,
  • Jürgen Bonnert,
  • Verena Mainz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2022.854777
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Post-stroke depression has been repeatedly associated with the degree of functional and cognitive impairment. The present study aimed to conduct a microanalysis on this association and examined the association between mood and self-reported functionality in 20 stroke patients (6 females, age: M = 59.9, SD = 5.2) using ecological momentary assessments (EMA), a structured diary method capturing moment-to-moment variations. Mood and self-reported functionality were recorded via a smartphone-app eight times a day for seven consecutive days during inpatient rehabilitation care. The patients answered on average to 73.2% of the received prompts. Variability in patients' responses was caused by differences both between and within patients. Multilevel regression analyses revealed that mood and self-reported functionality were significantly associated at the same point in time, but only patients' mood predicted their self-reported functionality at the next assessment point in time-lagged analyses. These results remained stable after controlling for between-person differences as patients' age, staff-ratings of their awareness of illness, and their degree of functional independence. Patients' mood appeared to affect their future ratings of their functionality but not the other way around.

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