Stroke, Vol 23, 1446-1453, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
SE Starkstein, JP Fedoroff, TR Price, R Leiguarda and RG Robinson
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Psychological and biological hypotheses have been
proposed to explain anosognosia. We correlated the presence of anosognosia
with the presence and severity of psychiatric disturbances, neglect,
intellectual impairments, and computed tomographic evidence of lesion size,
location, and measurements of brain atrophy. METHODS: A series of 80
patients with acute stroke were assessed using a battery of psychiatric and
neuropsychological tests and computed tomography. RESULTS: There were five
main findings. First, 27 (28%) of the 96 patients originally screened
showed anosognosia. Second, patients with anosognosia had significantly
higher frequencies of hemispatial neglect and related phenomena, as well as
deficits in recognizing facial emotions and in receptive prosody. Third,
depression was equally frequent among patients with and without
anosognosia. Fourth, patients with anosognosia had a significantly higher
frequency of right hemisphere lesions, primarily involving the
temporoparietal junction, thalamus, and basal ganglia. Fifth, patients with
anosognosia showed significantly more subcortical brain atrophy, primarily
involving the frontal white matter and diencephalic areas. CONCLUSIONS: The
present study demonstrates that anosognosia does not "protect" stroke
patients from depressive feelings; rather, it represents
arousal-attentional disorders after lesions in specific areas of the right
hemisphere in nonaphasic patients with preexisting subcortical atrophy.
ARTICLES
Anosognosia in patients with cerebrovascular lesions. A study of causative factors
Department of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md.
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