Global/local integration and corpus callosum: Anatomical and behavioural study of case of Allgrove syndrome (triple-A syndrome) - 26/09/15
Résumé |
Visuospatial perception is a complex ability, with various aspects. We are continuously integrating different information, like when our brain processes visual information from left and right hemisphere, in order to form a single and unitary image. The processing of visuospatial information, and more specifically its global/local aspect, has led to many studies, indicating the active involvement of the corpus callosum.
Objective |
To study the influence of an alteration of the corpus callosum on the integration of global/local information.
Methods |
C.M. presents an Allgrove syndrome [1 ], likely a pathology of white matter fibres. This patient, with a singular neuropsychological profile, is partially impaired in global and local information integration and shows a corpus callosum alteration. This research, a case-study with a group of 6 matched control subjects, relied on a two-level approach, anatomical (MRI-DTI) and behavioural, using a hierarchical letter paradigme [2 ].
Results |
Despite all the precautions needed regarding the interpretation of our results, some specificities are emphasized: at an anatomical level, we note, for C.M., a microscopic alteration of her corpus callosum; the results from our behavioural protocol show, for C.M., a higher precedence effect, a greater sensibility to interference and a facilitation effect more important.
Discussion |
These different results, never reported before in this pathology, indicates, for C.M., an impairment in global/local integration associated with a corpus callosum alteration. This alteration, probably part of a more global degenerative process linked to her pathology, shows the relevance of an extended neuropsychological assessment coupled to a DTI study, in order to better understand impairments generally appearing in neuropsychological rehabilitation.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Visuospatial processing, Global/local integration, Corpus callosum, Allgrove syndrome, Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)
Plan
Vol 58 - N° S1
P. e30 - septembre 2015 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.