What Is… Psychomotor Retardation

effects of psychomotor retardation in depression

In this series, I dig a little deeper into the meaning of psychological terms. This week’s term is psychomotor retardation (PMR).

Psychomotor retardation, one of the less common but more outwardly observable symptoms of depression, involves a slowing of movement and thoughts. It’s been described as far back as Ancient Greek times.

PMR is one of the DSM-5’s symptom criteria for a major depressive episode, and it’s part of the cluster of symptoms in the melancholic features specifier. One study found that a higher number of previous depressive episodes was associated with more severe psychomotor symptoms, and the researchers suggested that PMR may be like a scar of past depressive episodes.

What does psychomotor retardation look like?

PMR can affect multiple aspects of movement, including:

  • slowed movements that are noticeable to others
  • walking is slow, with abnormal gait
  • lack of facial expressiveness of emotion (“flat affect”)
  • decreased eye contact, fixed gaze
  • speech changes: decreased volume, slow and monotonous speech with increased pauses, delayed verbal responses and spontaneous speech
  • slumped posture
  • reduced movement in the trunk and proximal limbs, i.e. upper legs and arms

Non-clinicians may notice PMR in others but not understand what they’re seeing. My experience has been that general practitioners don’t tend to be familiar with what PMR (or at least severe PMR) looks like, and I have to tell them what they’re seeing.

In this video, I’m not moving far enough to get much of a sense of how ridiculously slow my walking is, but my speech impairment is quite obvious, as is the flat affect. When I’m well, I smile frequently and have done a fair bit of public speaking.

Effects on speech

Speaking involves both cognitive planning tasks and complex motor tasks. PMR can get in the way of both. PMR affects speech in a number of ways, and there are similarities to speech changes in Parkinson’s disease.

Tone, inflection, articulation, and volume are decreased, so speech is quiet, monotone, and less fluent. There are also more and longer pauses. Responses are delayed and of decreased length. Changes in glottalization, an effect sometimes described as creaky voice, may be a result of changes in laryngeal muscle tension in the throat.

Speech impairment and depression severity

Not everyone with severe depression experiences psychomotor retardation, but changes in speech can be indicative of depression severity. In one study, objectively measured changes in speech, specifically speech rate, pause time, and response time, were partially correlated to severity scores on the HAM-D, a commonly used test for measuring depression severity.

Another study found that several acoustic features were associated with greater depression severity, including features indicative of decreased precision in motor control, as well as decreased variability in certain speech parameters.

While the two main rating scales used to assess PMR rely on a clinician’s subjective evaluation of a patient’s speech, there is technology that can objectively evaluate this. However, the challenge lies in figuring out what’s best to measure and being able to separate out the various other factors that can affect speech.

I’ve done a Youtube video here focusing on speech impairment due to psychomotor retardation.

Biology

It isn’t known exactly how PMR happens biologically, but researchers have identified a number of possibilities. Dopamine appears to be the major neurotransmitter involved, particularly in relation to the basal ganglia region of the brain, although norepinephrine and GABA may play a role as well. Serotonin may also play a role in the cognitive aspect.

CSTC circuits

One major type of brain circuit is the cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) loop. It runs from the cortex (the outer, most advanced part of the brain) to the striatum (which is in the basal ganglia region and is involved in motor activity), and then swings by the thalamus before returning back to the cortex.

Structural and functional imaging studies in people with PMR have shown abnormalities in these CSTC circuits. The thalamus is part of the limbic system, and abnormal signals originating in that part of the brain may tie together the aspects of cognition, emotion, and movement.

Structural changes

Structural changes in the basal ganglia are thought to play a role. The basal ganglia region of the brain has a number of functions, including involvement in motor activity. This is the same area that’s implicated in tardive dyskinesia due to antipsychotics. Parkinson’s disease affects this same region, and there could be some form of shared underlying pathology with depression.

Researchers have also identified other structural changes that may be involved, including a correlation between white matter hyperintensities (a type of brain lesion) and PMR.

Blood flow

Decreased blood flow to several areas of the brain, including the prefrontal cortex and the supplemental motor area, has been observed in people with psychomotor retardation. Difficulty generating signals to the motor cortex region may also be a contributing factor.

Inflammation

There’s some indication that the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is involved. The HPA axis is how the brain and the adrenal glands communicate to regulate the release of the stress hormone cortisol, which influences inflammation in the brain and body.

A study by Goldsmith and colleagues observed a relationship between psychomotor speed in depressed patients and levels of the inflammatory markers interleukin 6 (IL-6) and monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP-1). Research has also identified various other inflammatory molecules that may play a role.

What does psychomotor retardation feel like?

Psychomotor retardation feels a lot like moving through molasses, both mentally and physically. It’s not a matter of lack of energy; if anything, I find that moving so slowly produces fatigue rather than the other way around, since moving feels like I need to push through physical resistance.

In terms of speech, I notice an impact on the cognitive elements of putting together words and word-finding, but what feels subjectively most difficult is what I would describe as finding and implementing the motor scripts for words. It’s easier for me to say a multi-syllable word than having to say multiple short words of the same overall syllable length, as it feels like I need to retrieve each word one at a time.

Making eye contact requires more mental energy than I have available. If I’m concentrating on getting words out, I find myself looking up at the ceiling, which you can see me doing in the video. The video also shows that I blink rapidly as I’m fishing for words. I actually hadn’t realized that prior to watching the video, but as far as I can tell, it seems to be as I’m looking for the movement patterns to voice words rather than looking for the words themselves.

My pattern over time

Slowed psychomotor activity has appeared off and on throughout the course of my illness. It was particularly bad during my second hospitalization, which lasted two months. As time has passed, though, there’s been a pattern of abrupt onset (or worsening) of PMR in response to major environmental stressors, which seems like it may relate to the HPA-axis/cortisol stress response. It generally starts when I wake up the day following the stressor, and tends to last a few weeks. In the past, the PMR would resolve between stress-induced spikes, but that’s no longer the case.

I’ve always been aware of PMR when it’s happening, although that awareness doesn’t help me do anything about it. It feels like my body just can’t go any faster. When it’s mild, it mostly affects walking, but when it’s bad, it has a significant impact on my speech.

Treating PMR

Psychomotor retardation can be difficult to treat, and it doesn’t always respond as well to antidepressant therapy as other symptoms do. Research has shown mixed results as to whether some antidepressants are likely to work better than others.

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) can be helpful. You can read about my experiences getting ECT here.

The addition of a stimulant medication is also an option. I’ve found that dextroamphetamine (Dexedrine) has helped. I don’t notice any changes immediately after taking a dose, but I notice a difference after being on it (or off it) for several days.

Infliximab, also known as Remicade, is a monoclonal antibody that targets an element of the body’s inflammatory system called TNF-alpha. There is some research to indicate that it can reduce depressive symptoms, including PMR.


Is psychomotor retardation a symptom you’ve experienced with your illness? Have you noticed any patterns with it?

References

  • Bennabi, D., Vandel, P., Papaxanthis, C., Pozzo, T., & Haffen, E. (2013). Psychomotor retardation in depression: a systematic review of diagnostic, pathophysiologic, and therapeutic implications. BioMed Research International2013.
  • Buyukdura, J. S., McClintock, S. M., & Croarkin, P. E. (2011). Psychomotor retardation in depression: biological underpinnings, measurement, and treatment. Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry, 35(2), 395–409.
  • Dantchev N, & Widlöcher DJ. (1998). The measurement of retardation in depression. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 59 Suppl 14:19-25.
  • Flint, A. J., Black, S. E., Campbell-Taylor, I., Gailey, G. F., & Levinton, C. (1993). Abnormal speech articulation, psychomotor retardation, and subcortical dysfunction in major depression. Journal of Psychiatric Research27(3), 309-319.
  • Fond, G., Hamdani, N., Kapczinski, F., Boukouaci, W., Drancourt, N., Dargel, A., … & Leboyer, M. (2014). Effectiveness and tolerance of anti-inflammatory drugs’ add-on therapy in major mental disorders: a systematic qualitative review. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica129(3), 163-179.
  • Goldsmith, D. R., Haroon, E., Woolwine, B. J., Jung, M. Y., Wommack, E. C., Harvey, P. D., … & Miller, A. H. (2016). Inflammatory markers are associated with decreased psychomotor speed in patients with major depressive disorder. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity56, 281-288.
  • Gorwood, P., Richard-Devantoy, S., Baylé, F., & Cléry-Melun, M. L. (2014). Psychomotor retardation is a scar of past depressive episodes, revealed by simple cognitive tests. European Neuropsychopharmacology, 24(10), 1630-1640.
  • Liberg, B., & Rahm, C. (2015). The functional anatomy of psychomotor disturbances in major depressive disorder. Frontiers in Psychiatry6, 34.
  • Quatieri, T. F., & Malyska, N. (2012). Vocal-source biomarkers for depression: A link to psychomotor activity. In Thirteenth Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association.
  • Sobin, C., Mayer, L., & Endicott, J. (1998). The motor agitation and retardation scale: a scale for the assessment of motor abnormalities in depressed patients. The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 10(1), 85-92.
  • Yamamoto, M., Takamiya, A., Sawada, K., Yoshimura, M., Kitazawa, M., Liang, K. C., … & Kishimoto, T. (2020). Using speech recognition technology to investigate the association between timing-related speech features and depression severity. PloS one15(9), e0238726.
book cover: Managing the Depression Puzzle, 2nd Edition, by Ashley L. Peterson

Managing the Depression Puzzle takes a holistic look at the different potential pieces that might fit into your unique depression puzzle.

It’s available on Amazon and Google Play.

Ashley L. Peterson headshot

Ashley L. Peterson

BScPharm BSN MPN

Ashley is a former mental health nurse and pharmacist and the author of four books.

8 thoughts on “What Is… Psychomotor Retardation”

  1. I have this (without cognitive function being affected) but I never knew what it WAS. I thought I was just getting ‘old’. Wow. Depression has a myriad of symptoms, many of which are never shared with the patient apparently. Now I’ll worry less at least, on a bad day when I can’t move very well or at all without a lot of pain and feeling like I’m tripping over my own feet. I’ll know it’s my brain chemistry doing that. Thanks Ashleyleia!

  2. With the two episodes of depression which were more severe than the others, which includes the one I had following withdrawal from long-term antidepressants, this was definitely something I noticed. Kind of a wading-through-treacle feeling both mentally and physically. I also noticed very specific cognitive deficits like difficulty sequencing tasks, which took a surprisingly long time to recover and didn’t exactly parallel the improvement in mood.

  3. I am not sure if I have grasped all that is within this article. I may have to read this over several times.
    I do agree though about “stigma”. I find it mostly among people when I mention “bi-polar”. It seems that they have in their mind what a person who is bi-polar should act like, talk like. This can be attributed to our overblown media which has no understanding of the basics when it comes to mental health.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Mental Health @ Home

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading