Spatial neglect represents a common and severe cognitive disorder following unilateral (mostly right hemisphere) stroke. Patients are unaware of objects, persons and even own body parts in the (usually left) hemispace opposite to their brain lesion. While there is spontaneous remission in some patients, neglect symptoms persist in many stroke survivors which is associated with a poor functional outcome. Although different therapeutic approaches (including cognitive interventions, non-invasive brain stimulation and drugs) have been investigated in the last decades, an established therapy is still missing. Hence, there is a clear need for an effective and feasible intervention that can be applied in rehabilitation centers. This study is dedicated to assess the effect of a cognitive treatment consisting of combined optokinetic stimulation (OKS) and cueing-based reading therapy (READ) on hemispatial neglect and the neglect-related functional disability in right-hemisphere stroke patients. It will be a mono-centric, randomized, controlled, clinical trial. Using a crossover design with two arms, patients will either receive the intervention therapy (OKS-READ) first and subsequently the control treatment (neuropsychological training not targeting visuospatial attention) or they will start in the control arm and then switch to the intervention. Each treatment phase consists of 15 therapy sessions lasting 30 to 45 minutes. The outcome will be assessed at different time points, including established neuropsychological tests for spatial neglect and a clinical score of neglect-related functional disability.
see above
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
32
Each intervention session starts with an optokinetic stimulation (OKS) of at least 15 minutes duration. A pattern of squares, dots, triangles and stars will coherently and continuously move to the left on a computer screen in front of the patients. Patients are instructed to choose one stimulus and follow it with the eyes until it has reached the left side of the screen, then jump to the right edge of the screen and start again. The second part of each intervention session is the cueing-based reading therapy (READ), which will also last at least 15 minutes. The task of the patient is to read out loud words or a text presented on a paper in front of them. We will use exogenous (e.g., the therapist highlights words when they were omitted) and endogenous cues (verbal instructions which require intrinsic action by the patient) to facilitate attentional shifts to the left. The intensity of cueing will be matched to the actual severity of neglect (adaptive therapy).
As a control treatment the patients will receive neuropsychological treatment without targeting visuospatial attention. Examples for components implemented are supporting conversations, diagnostic assessments (e.g. memory diagnostics) and training of memory and executive functions.
University of Luebeck, Dept. of Neurology
Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Neglect symptom severity (neuropsychological test performance)
Composite score of different established computerized tests assessing spatial neglect (minimum 0%, maximum 100%, higher score means better outcome)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Neglect-related functional disability
Clinical score of neglect-related functional disability (Catherine Bergego Scale, CBS; minimum 0, maximum 30, higher score means worse outcome)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Neglect dyslexia
Performance in the Menu reading task of the Behavioural Inattention Test battery (minimum 0 correct words (worst outcome), maximum 24 correct words (best outcome)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Attention bias during a visuo-motor cancellation task
Bias of the Center of Cancellation (CoC) during the Bells test (values between -1 (strongest leftward bias), 0 (no bias) and +1 (strongest rightward bias)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Oculomotor bias during visual exploration
Bias of the Center of Fixation (CoF) during free viewing of naturalistic photographs as measured with an infrared remote eye tracker (values between -1 (strongest leftward bias), 0 (no bias) and +1 (strongest rightward bias)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Anosognosia
Difference between investigator-assessed CBS score and the patient's self-assessed CBS score
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Non-neglect specific functional outcome (Barthel)
Barthel Index (min. 0, max. 100, higher score means better outcome)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
Functional Independence (FIM)
Functional Independence Measure (18 items scale with scores between 0 and 7 points; higher scores mean better outcome)
Time frame: Intra-individual difference of the outcome's change during 3 weeks Intervention versus 3 weeks Control phase, i.e. (T3 on Day 21 - T2 on Day 1) - (T5 on Day 42 - T4 on Day 22)
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