Current evidence suggests an association between contralesional extra-personal hemineglect and deficits of arm position sense in patients with damage to the right cerebral hemisphere. A unitary deficit may produce both disorders, or this association may reflect the anatomical contiguity of relevant brain structures. A rehabilitation treatment, devised for visual-spatial hemineglect, was used to investigate these hypotheses in 8 patients with damage to the right cerebral hemisphere. The treatment improved hemineglect, but not the position sense deficit. The severity of the latter was however transiently reduced by optokinetic stimulation, with effects similar to those found in visual-spatial hemineglect. These effects of rehabilitation suggest that extra-personal hemineglect and the neglect-related component of the position sense disorder of the left forearm are independent, though frequently associated, deficits. Implications for the design of rehabilitation programs are discussed.
Dissociation between position sense and visual-spatial components of hemineglect through a specific rehabilitation treatment / Giuseppe, Vallar; Guariglia, Cecilia; Luisa, Magnotti; Pizzamiglio, Luigi Remo. - In: NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENT, AND COGNITION. SECTION A, JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 1380-3395. - STAMPA. - 19:5(1997), pp. 763-771. [10.1080/01688639708403758]
Dissociation between position sense and visual-spatial components of hemineglect through a specific rehabilitation treatment
GUARIGLIA, Cecilia;PIZZAMIGLIO, Luigi Remo
1997
Abstract
Current evidence suggests an association between contralesional extra-personal hemineglect and deficits of arm position sense in patients with damage to the right cerebral hemisphere. A unitary deficit may produce both disorders, or this association may reflect the anatomical contiguity of relevant brain structures. A rehabilitation treatment, devised for visual-spatial hemineglect, was used to investigate these hypotheses in 8 patients with damage to the right cerebral hemisphere. The treatment improved hemineglect, but not the position sense deficit. The severity of the latter was however transiently reduced by optokinetic stimulation, with effects similar to those found in visual-spatial hemineglect. These effects of rehabilitation suggest that extra-personal hemineglect and the neglect-related component of the position sense disorder of the left forearm are independent, though frequently associated, deficits. Implications for the design of rehabilitation programs are discussed.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.