Abstract
Major depressive disorder in old age can cause changes in the cerebral cortex that might lead to postural imbalance and thus increase fall risk. We aim to examine cortical activation during standing balance in depressed older patients compared to healthy controls and to determine how an additional cognitive task affects this activation. Eleven older patients (age ≥65 years) diagnosed with major depressive disorder and sixteen age-matched healthy controls participated in the study. Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) was used to assess cortical activation of the prefrontal (PFC) and motor (MC) cortex during standing balance with eyes closed under single and dual task (counting backwards). The present study generally revealed tendencies in the MC – and partly the PFC too – for more activation whilst balancing compared to baseline. Also, in the MC, patients tended to show more cortical activation compared to controls and dual task tended to elicit more activation. The results suggest that depressed older patients, to compensate for their illness, may require increased cortical activation to perform motor and cognitive tasks than healthy controls. The absence of PFC activation in the main analyses may be related to the small participant number and possibly to too simple task conditions.
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