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Original Articles

Neuropsychological improvement versus practice effect following unilateral carotid endarterectomy in patients without stroke

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Pages 461-470 | Accepted 31 Mar 1988, Published online: 04 Jan 2008
 

Abstract

Patients who were admitted to hospital for a recent transient ischemic attack were entered into one of three groups based on medical and surgical characteristics; those with an abnormal neurological examination or a focal abnormality on CT Scan were omitted from the study. The two surgical groups (12 patients each) underwent either a left or right endarterectomy for a symptomatic atheroma of the ipsilateral carotid artery. The control group consisted of 12 patients who either demonstrated minor or nonexistent carotid abnormalities or a TIA distribution that was contralateral to what would otherwise have been a surgically treatable lesion. Patients were tested before surgery and again 6–8 weeks later with the WAIS, WMS, and other neuropsychological measures. Significant improvement on some measures at follow-up was strictly equivalent across all groups and was attributed to practice effects.

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