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Front Hum Neurosci. 2012 Jun 22;6:188. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00188. eCollection 2012.

Limb activation ameliorates body-related deficits in spatial neglect.

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1
Clinical Neuropsychology Unit and Outpatient Service, Saarland University Saarbruecken, Germany.

Abstract

Many neglect patients show deficits in the mental representation of their contralesional body side or body parts, termed personal neglect. These deficits include impairments in identifying body parts on schematic drawings of human bodies. Limb activation and alertness cues have been shown to modulate neglect transiently, and are effective treatments for several symptoms of the neglect syndrome. Here, we tested on eight patients with right-hemispheric stroke and left-sided spatial neglect whether these two techniques modulate deficits in the mental representation of hands, assessed with a hand-test in which the subjects had to decide whether a depicted schematic hand belongs to the left or right side of the human body. The results showed that neglect patients made marginally significant (p = 0.065) more errors in left-hand-decisions than right-hand-decisions, indicating a neglect-specific disorder. Moreover, we found that left-sided limb activation but not non-lateralized alertness cueing (a loud noise immediately before patients made their perceptual decision) significantly reduced misidentifications for depicted left hands as compared to baseline. No effect of any intervention was observed on error rates for depicted right hands. We conclude that the amelioration of the performance in the hand task is modulated by the activation of the body schema or other body representations through left-sided limb activation.

KEYWORDS:

body representational neglect; body schema; limb activation; personal neglect; phasic alerting; rehabilitation; representational neglect; treatment

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