Author:
Ahern Geoffrey L.,Herring Anne M.,Labiner David M.,Weinand and Martin E.
Abstract
There are dramatic changes in the electroencephalogram
of the inactivated hemisphere in the intracarotid sodium
amobarbital test. One of the more profound behavioral changes
during this procedure is left hemispatial neglect accompanying
right hemisphere inactivation. The present study was designed
to ascertain whether there was a clear relationship between
the degree of hemispheric inactivation (as measured by
the electroencephalogram) and the degree of left hemispatial
neglect during this procedure. Sixty-nine participants
undergoing right hemisphere intracarotid sodium amobarbital
testing were presented with a random letter cancellation
test at various points during the procedure. Neglect was
quantified as significant, moderate,
minimal, or none, based on how many target
letters the patients missed. The simultaneous electroencephalogram
from each of these testing points was spectrally analyzed
and topographic maps were generated. The degree of neglect
was then compared with the comparable topographic map.
It was found that as the amobarbital-induced right hemispheric
dysfunction regressed, the degree of neglect lessened in
a systematic fashion, as did the profound electroencephalographic
changes induced by the drug. Thus, there is a clear relation
between the degree of hemispheric inactivation induced
by the amobarbital and the degree of left hemispatial neglect.
This relationship held regardless of side of hemispheric
language dominance or epileptic focus. These results replicate
previous findings that right hemisphere inactivation during
the intracarotid sodium amobarbital test results in left
hemispatial neglect. They extend these findings by clearly
showing that neglect changes in a quantitative fashion
(rather than being an all-or-none phenomenon) and further,
show that there is a clear relationship between the severity
of neglect and the degree of hemispheric dysfunction. (JINS,
1998, 4, 99–105.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Neurology,Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
3 articles.
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