Motor recovery after stroke depends on intact sustained attention: a 2-year follow-up study.

Neuropsychology

MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Rehabilitation Research Group, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, England.

Published: April 1997

The functional recovery of 47 right-brain-damaged stroke patients was studied over a 2-year period. The researchers hypothesized that sustained attention capacity should predict the degree of motor and functional recovery over this period because of a proposed privileged role of sustained attention in learning-based recovery of function. As predicted, significant correlations were found between sustained attention capacity at 2 months and functional status (including the Barthel Index) at 2 years. This relationship was shown to exist independently of 2-month functional status. Furthermore, compared with a left-brain-damaged group of cerebrovascular accident (CVA) patients, the right-brain CVA group did not recover functional ability as well over the 2-year period. This increasing difference in functional status over a 2-year period was mirrored by an emerging difference in sustained attention capacity, in favor of the left-brain CVA group.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037//0894-4105.11.2.290DOI Listing

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