1. Rotational coherent dot movement normalizes spatial disorientation of the subjective visual vertical in patients with rightsided stroke.
- Author
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Reinhart S, Schaadt AK, Keller I, Hildebrandt H, Kerkhoff G, and Utz K
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Brain diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Judgment, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Perceptual Disorders diagnostic imaging, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Perceptual Disorders therapy, Photic Stimulation methods, Rotation, Stroke complications, Stroke diagnostic imaging, Stroke therapy, Functional Laterality, Motion Perception, Perceptual Disorders psychology, Space Perception, Stroke psychology
- Abstract
Studies in healthy individuals indicate a significant influence of rotating visual motion on judgments of the subjective visual vertical (SVV). Moreover, sensory stimulation manoeuvres like horizontal coherent dot movement significantly modulate horizontal spatial deficits in patients with rightsided stroke. Here, we investigated whether rotational coherent dot movement (RCDM) modulates spatial orientation deficits of the SVV in the roll plane in right hemispheric stroke. We tested the perceptual judgment of the SVV in 20 patients with right-hemispheric, first ever stroke (10 of them with a disorder of the SVV and 10 without a disorder), and 10 healthy, age-matched subjects under three experimental conditions: (1) with a static background of small white dots, (2) with slow clockwise or (3) counterclockwise circular RCDM of these background stimuli. In the baseline condition with static background, the impaired patient group showed a counterclockwise tilt of the SVV. Clockwise RCDM normalized this deficit completely, while with counterclockwise RCDM a slight aggravation was observed. Similar but quantitatively much smaller effects were obtained in the SVV-unimpaired patients and the healthy individuals. These results demonstrate a strong modulatory effect of RCDM on the SVV in patients with a tilt of the SVV due to right-sided stroke. RCDM thus appears to influence higher spatial representations devoted to visuospatial perception of the SVV. Possible mechanisms as well as clinical implications for therapy of visuospatial disorientation (self-orientation in space) after stroke are discussed., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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