Progress in brain research
-
A large proportion of right-hemisphere stroke patients show hemispatial neglect, a neurological deficit of perception, attention, representation, and/or performing actions within their left-sided space, inducing many functional debilitating effects on everyday life, and responsible for poor functional recovery and ability to benefit from treatment. This spatial cognition disorder affects the orientation of behavior with a shift of proprioceptive representations toward the lesion side. This shift is similar to that produced by psychophysical manipulations as a wedge-prism exposure in normal healthy subjects. ⋯ Moreover the positive effects found for both sensorimotor and more cognitive spatial functions lasted for at least two or more hours after prism removal. Unlike reduction of neglect through sensory stimulations, the long-lasting improvement of neglect after prism adaptation suggests the activation of short-term plasticity of brain functions related to coordinate transformations and space representations. Lastly, the duration of these effects could be useful in rehabilitation programs, as suggested by the effects of prism adaptation on disabling neglect symptoms as wheelchair driving, posture or writing.