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(Stroke. 2006;37:542.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.
Research Reports |
From the Service de Rééducation Neurologique and EA 2691, Hôpital Swynghedauw, CHRU de Lille, France.
Correspondence to M. Rousseaux, Service de Rééducation Neurologique, Hôpital Swynghedauw, CHRU, 59037 Lille Cedex, France. E-mail mrousseaux{at}chru-lille.fr
| Abstract |
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Methods Ten patients (hemianopia in 6) and 8 control subjects were included. Tasks were reading single words, nonwords, and a text, bell cancellation, line bisection, and scene drawing, before and after adaptation, with either deviating or neutral prisms.
Results Errors were more frequent in patients but without any specific effect of PA. We found partial improvement at the late sessions, independent of prisms.
Conclusions We did not confirm the efficacy of PA on spatial neglect.
Key Words: neglect rehabilitation stroke
| Introduction |
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We re-evaluated the efficacy of PA on reading and other clinical tests by comparing the effect of deviating and neutral prisms in the same patients.
| Subjects and Methods |
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Tests
We first used conventional clinical SN test: bell cancellation (leftright omissions), line bisection (20 cm; right deviation in mm), and Ogden scene drawing (from 0: omission of the left tree, barrier, house, and left part of the right tree; to 10: perfect reproduction).
A special emphasis was given to reading tests. Words (list A 48; list B 48) were concrete substantives, balanced according to 3 main factors: type (noncompound, prefixed, suffixed, compound words), length (5 to 6, 7 to 8, 9 to 10 letters), and frequency in the written language (high, low). Lists A and B were equivalent and presented alternatively. Nonwords (72) were constructed from the high-frequency words by single letter substitution or addition in the left or the right part of letter strings. Items were presented in a fixed semirandom order and written in lowercase "courier" fonts on an 8x15-cm card. We analyzed the percentage of errors. We also presented a text of 130 words (size font 20; "courier"; 10 lines of 27.3 cm; 9 loosely related sentences) written on a horizontal A4 sheet and evaluated the difference between left and right omissions (%).
Procedure
Each test was presented during 6 sessions of
35 minutes: pretest 1 (baseline), pretest 2 (1 hour pre-PA), post-test 1 (5 minutes after PA), post-test 2 (3 hours after PA), post-test 3 (1 day after PA), and post-test 4 (3 days after PA).
PA was done successively (1-week interval, counterbalanced order) with prisms deviating visual perception at 10° toward the right side or with neutral prisms (Société Peter, Lyon). During PA, subjects had to point repeatedly with the right index finger to red or green dots placed at +10° or 10° from the body midline (60 cm). At least 50 trials were performed until target was reached without final hesitation.1 A mask prevented subjects from viewing their arm. Immediately after PA, they were tested with 2 to 3 trials to ascertain leftward deviation more than 2.9° (3 cm) when pointing with the eyes closed to a dot previously seen, facing their body midline. The mean deviation was 4.8° (range 3.8° to 10.4°).
Statistical Analyses
We used repeated-measure ANOVAs, with group as between-subject factor (N+H+, N+H, controls) and prism and session as within-subject factors. Post hoc analyses used the NewmanKeuls test. The
risk was P
0.05.
| Results |
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In reading single words, factor group showed a clear tendency to significance (P=0.052) because errors (%) were more frequent in both patient groups than controls (N+H+ 40.0%; N+H11.9%; controls 0.4%). Errors decreased with sessions (P=0.001), and the groupxsession interaction (P=0.002) was explained by the more severe reduction at post-tests 3 and 4 in both patient groups (Figure ). However, the groupxsessionxprism interaction was not significant, showing that this phenomenon was present with each prism. The main effect of prism was not significant.
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In reading single nonwords, the group effect (P=0.009) was related to more frequent errors in both patient groups than controls (N+H+52.7%; N+H28.2%; controls 1.8%). We found a main effect of session (P=0.009) because of a reduction of errors at post-tests 3 and 4. But the main effect of prism and the groupxsessionxprism interaction were not significant.
For reading a text, the group effect was significant (P=0.0001) on leftright omissions, which were greater in patients than controls (global: N+H+54.0%; N+H4.2%; controls 0.05%). The main effects of the other factors and the interactions were not significant.
At an individual level, the negative results were relatively homogenous and independent of the severity of SN; no patient showed definite and selective improvement using deviating prisms.
| Discussion |
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It seems unlikely that our negative results were related to prisms, PA training, or tests, which were similar to those used by other authors. The post-PA effect measured by index finger pointing was comparable.24 Furthermore, the absence of effect was not related to the presence of hemianopia.4 One important point was that we showed partial improvement with repetition of tests, independent of the quality of prisms, which was more evident at later sessions. It could be related to a learning effect or an increase of vigilance or sustained attention, both of which have an important relationship with SN.8 This could account for the improvement reported in previous series, in which the effect of deviating prisms was not systematically compared with that of neutral prisms in the same patients.
It must also be emphasized that other authors did not find effectiveness on spatial attention tasks,5 and that poor generalization has been reported when PA used an upper-limb reaching task compared with a walking task.9 This later result suggests that PA be performed using more global tasks to draw clearer conclusions about its efficacy in SN patients.
Received September 5, 2005; revision received October 18, 2005; accepted November 8, 2005.
| References |
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2. Farné A, Rossetti Y, Toniolo S, Làdavas E. Ameliorating neglect with prism adaptation: visuo-manual and visuo-verbal measures. Neuropsychologia. 2002; 40: 718729.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
3. Angeli V, Benassi MG, Ladavas E. Recovery of oculo-motor bias in neglect patients after prism adaptation. Neuropsychologia. 2004; 42: 12231234.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
4. Angeli V, Meneghello F, Mattioli F, Ladavas E. Mechanisms underlying visuo-spatial amelioration of neglect after prism adaptation. Cortex. 2004; 40: 155156.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
5. Morris AP, Kritikos A, Berberovic N, Pisella L, Chambers CD, Mattingley JB. Prism adaptation and spatial attention: a study of visual search in normals and patients with unilateral neglect. Cortex. 2004; 40: 703721.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
6. Rousseaux M, Beis JM, Pradat-Diehl P, Martin Y, Bartolomeo P, Bernati T, Chokron S, Leclercq M, Louis-Dreyfus A, Marchal F, Perennou D, Prairial C, Rode G, Samuel C, Sieroff E, Wiart L, Azouvi P. Batterie de dépistage de la négligence spatiale. Normes et effets de l
age, du niveau déducation, du sexe, de la main et de la latéralité. Rev Neurol (Paris). 2001; 157: 13851400.[Medline]
[Order article via Infotrieve]
7. Frassinetti F, Angeli V, Meneghello F, Avanzi S, Ladavas E. Long-lasting amelioration of visuospatial neglect by prism adaptation. Brain. 2002; 125: 608623.
8. Robertson IH, Tegner R, Tham K, Lo A, Nimmo-Smith I. Sustained attention training for unilateral neglect: theoretical and rehabilitation implications. J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 1995; 17: 416430.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
9. Morton SM, Bastian AJ. Prism adaptation during walking generalizes to reaching and requires the cerebellum. J Neurophysiol. 2004; 92: 2497: 2509.
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