Publication | Closed Access
Cognitive rehabilitation of the hemineglect disorder in chronic patients with unilateral right brain damage
263
Citations
29
References
1992
Year
NeuropsychologyChronic PatientsNeurological RehabilitationBrain LesionCognitive RehabilitationBrain Injury RehabilitationSocial SciencesThirteen PatientsScanning DeficitStroke RehabilitationHemineglect DisorderBrain InjuryNeurologyNeurorehabilitationCognitive NeuroscienceNeuropathologyRadiologyNeuropsychological FunctioningRehabilitationRehabilitation TrainingPhysical TherapyFunctional RecoveryNeuroscienceConcussionMedicine
Thirteen patients with a stabilized hemineglect symptomatology due to right-hemisphere lesions were subjected to a rehabilitation training specifically aimed at reducing the scanning deficit. The training consisted of four procedures (visual-spatial scanning, reading and copying training, copying of line drawings on a dot matrix, and figure description) which lasted 40 sessions. By the end of therapy, the patients as a group showed significant improvements on several standard tests of hemineglect. The results on a Semi-structured Scale for the Functional Evaluation of Hemineglect pointed to the extension of exploratory improvements to situations similar to those of daily life. In contrast, patients improved very slightly on a variety of standard visual-spatial tests, indicating the specificity of training in reducing the scanning defect. Seven patients were examined at a follow-up several months after the end of therapy and appeared stable on both standard and functional tests of neglect.
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