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Original Articles

Wisconsin card sorting test performance in patients with complex partial seizures of temporal-lobe origin

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Pages 467-476 | Accepted 27 Apr 1987, Published online: 04 Jan 2008
 

Abstract

Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) performance was investigated in patients with complex partial seizures (CPS) of dominant (n=16) or nondominant (n=19) temporal-lobe origin as well as in an epilepsy control group (n=6) which consisted largely of patients with primary generalized epilepsies. Fifty seven percent of the CPS group (39% of dominant and 74% of nondominant temporal-lobe patients) performed in a manner suggestive of frontal-lobe pathology compared to 17% of the epilepsy controls. There were no differences among the groups in the number of categories achieved, but there were substantial qualitative differences in problem-solving efficiency. Nondominant temporal patients manifested more total errors and perseverative errors relative to both dominant temporal and epilepsy controls, and more perseverative responses relative to epilepsy controls. Dominant temporal-lobe patients showed more perseverative errors than epilepsy controls. Finally, a consecutive series of patients who underwent partial temporal-lobe resection were examined 6 months postsurgically and they were found to manifest significantly fewer perseverative responses. The possible reasons for “frontal-like” performance in CPS patients with documented temporal-lobe pathology are discussed and a specific hypothesis is suggested.

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