2020
DOI: 10.1080/09602011.2020.1779754
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Multisensory stimulation for the rehabilitation of unilateral spatial neglect

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Depending on location, type, and severity of the cerebrovascular occlusion, patients typically exhibit two main categories of impairments following the acute phase of a stroke: (i) motor disability, manifested with the inability to walk, problematic coordination and balance, hemiplegia or hemiparesis; (ii) cognitive and neuropsychological impairments, including aphasia, amnesia, executive dysfunctions, apraxia, impaired visuospatial abilities, and mood disorders (Sundar and Adwan 2010 ; Chen et al, 2013 ; Sun et al, 2014 ; Pedroli et al, 2015 ; Jokinen et al, 2015 ; Cipresso et al, 2018a ). Approximately, 50% of patients who suffered from right-brain stroke manifest unilateral spatial neglect (USN), a complex and heterogeneous attentional-perceptual syndrome characterized by a difficulty or inability to pay attention, detect, and orient toward stimuli presented in the contralesional side (Heilman, et al, 2000 ; Tsirlin et al, 2009 ; Pedroli et al, 2015 ; Rode et al, 2017 ; Zigiotto et al, 2020 ). USN can be divided into several subcategories, depending on whether the behavior is elicited by a sensory, motor, or representational modality, or whether it involves one’s peripersonal, extra-personal, or spatial representation (Plummer et al, 2003 ; Buxbaum et al, 2004 ; Grattan and Woodbury, 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Depending on location, type, and severity of the cerebrovascular occlusion, patients typically exhibit two main categories of impairments following the acute phase of a stroke: (i) motor disability, manifested with the inability to walk, problematic coordination and balance, hemiplegia or hemiparesis; (ii) cognitive and neuropsychological impairments, including aphasia, amnesia, executive dysfunctions, apraxia, impaired visuospatial abilities, and mood disorders (Sundar and Adwan 2010 ; Chen et al, 2013 ; Sun et al, 2014 ; Pedroli et al, 2015 ; Jokinen et al, 2015 ; Cipresso et al, 2018a ). Approximately, 50% of patients who suffered from right-brain stroke manifest unilateral spatial neglect (USN), a complex and heterogeneous attentional-perceptual syndrome characterized by a difficulty or inability to pay attention, detect, and orient toward stimuli presented in the contralesional side (Heilman, et al, 2000 ; Tsirlin et al, 2009 ; Pedroli et al, 2015 ; Rode et al, 2017 ; Zigiotto et al, 2020 ). USN can be divided into several subcategories, depending on whether the behavior is elicited by a sensory, motor, or representational modality, or whether it involves one’s peripersonal, extra-personal, or spatial representation (Plummer et al, 2003 ; Buxbaum et al, 2004 ; Grattan and Woodbury, 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies that employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) on VSN patients’ brains have also shown lesions in the right superior and medio-temporal gyri, the basal ganglia, as well as white matter tracts damages in both uncinate fasciculus and inferior occipitofrontal (Karnath et al, 2011 ; Vuilleumier, 2013 ; Lunven et al, 2015 ; Wahlin et al, 2019 ). Furthermore, the deficits include the ventral and dorsal areas of the attention networks, placed in the fronto-parietal portion of the brain; the ventral attention network (VAN) includes the temporo-parietal and inferior-frontal right cortex and accounts for the detection of unexpected, relevant stimuli, whereas the dorsal attention network (DAN) accounts for the top-down selection of stimuli and comprises portions of the intraparietal and superior frontal cortex (Corbetta et al, 2005 ; Ogourtsova et al, 2018a , 2018b ; Wahlin et al 2019 ; Zigiotto et al, 2020 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Focusing on USN treatments, VR-based methods proved in some cases to be even more sensitive in the assessment, especially for mild patients who may not be detected by standard paper-and-pencil test (Kim et al, 2011), while other studies showed better outcomes after VR-based rehabilitation sessions compared with classical methods (Buxbaum et al, 2008;Dawson et al, 2008). Moreover, multisensory stimulation is increasingly recognized and adopted as an effective USN rehabilitation method (Zigiotto et al, 2020), and VR technology constitutes the perfect tool to control and integrate different sensory modalities. Nevertheless, VR implementations of USN rehabilitation methods are focused mainly on visual and auditory stimuli (Tsirlin et al, 2009), and more rarely they include haptic interactions (Baheux et al, 2006;Teruel et al, 2015).To date and to the best knowledge of the authors, there has not been any investigation using olfactory stimuli with neuropsychological visual cancellation task, and this study represents an initial step toward the creation of VR multisensory environments that include olfactory stimulations.…”
Section: Opportunities and Implications For Neuropsychologymentioning
confidence: 99%