Interpreting spatial dysgraphia after stroke: Straight ahead or straight above? - 15/07/18
Résumé |
Introduction/Background |
Spatial dysgraphia after a right hemisphere lesion, associates signs of spatial compression in relation to spatial neglect, and a tilted writing which remains to be explained. Here, we present a case study suggesting that tilted writing is due to a tilted representation of the vertical.
Material and method |
J.W., a 75-year-old patient who underwent a right parietal hemorrhage showed a pusher syndrome and a writing tilted 11.1° upwardly without other signs of spatial dysgraphia. We comprehensively assessed and followed most aspects of spatial cognition (spatial neglect, verticality perception) and handwriting, until nine months post-stroke. Examination of J.W.’s handwriting was performed by means of a graphic tablet quantifying writing orientation and speed, in the presence or not of spatial indexes, and after a transient modulation of verticality perception.
Results |
In acute stage, spatial neglect was severe with predominant signs of body neglect. At three months, visual (VV) and postural (PV) perceptions of the vertical were tilted of 11°, counterclockwise. This transmodal tilt was similar both in direction and magnitude to the tilt found congruent on both features of writing: left-hand margin and lines. J.W.’s writing speed was found slower than a control subject in the blank paper condition (1.67 vs. 0.82 s/letter; P<0.001), and faster when writing on lines inclined 24° upwardly (1.11 s/letter; P<0.05). The transient modulation of verticality perception (PV=0.5°) was performed by tilting the patient for 10min at 30° to the right side, in the dark. This PV modulation reduced the writing tilt, measured 20min later (6.2°; P=0.001) and increased the writing speed (0.89 s/letter; P=0.002). Nine months post-stroke, while spatial neglect had completely recovered, a congruent tilt both in verticality perception and writing persisted (5° and 8.8°, respectively).
Conclusion |
After right hemisphere stroke, a tilted writing is likely a sign of a tilted verticality representation.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Spatial dysgraphia, Verticality representation, Stroke
Plan
Vol 61 - N° S
P. e184-e185 - juillet 2018 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.