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Original Articles

A new clinical evaluation of asomatognosia in right brain damaged patients using visual and reaching tasks

, ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon &
Pages 436-449 | Received 06 May 2019, Accepted 09 Apr 2020, Published online: 07 May 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Introduction

The term asomatognosia refers to a unilateral disturbance of body ownership following a cerebrovascular incident. Patients with asomatognosia consider the contralesional limbs as missing or having disappeared from awareness. This neuropsychological disorder modifies body ownership in terms of perceptual experience, visual identification and sense of belonging of contralesional body parts. In the literature, asomatognosia is usually tested by using verbal scales.

Method

In this study, we first developed a new test to assess asomatognosia that includes a visual identification task and a reaching task. We examined 16 healthy participants and 20 right brain damaged patients. The participants were asked to identify, reach and touch their left hand when positioned in peripersonal space, in presence of an extraneous hand (belonging to the examiner). We analyzed how the deficit is modulated by the reciprocal positions in space of the two limbs, the relationship with personal neglect and the anatomical correlate using a Voxel-based Lesion Symptom Mapping (VLSM) analysis with CT data.

Results

The results show that the asomatognosia cannot be simply considered as one of the many manifestations of personal neglect but should be taken into account as a “productive” disorder characterized by the misidentification of the own hand with an extraneous hand. The VLSM analysis of patients with asomatognosia revealed the involvement of the inferior and middle frontal lobe.

Conclusions

The novel task that has been developed in the present study could be used as an objective tool to measure this specific disorder of body ownership or to uncover subclinical conditions of asomatognosia.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Credit authorship contribution statement

Lucia Spinazzola: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Data curation, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Supervision, Validation; Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing.

Chiara Pagliari: Conceptualization, Data curation, Methodology, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing.

Alessio Facchin: Formal analysis, Methodology, Writing - original draft, Writing – review & editing.

Angelo Maravita: Conceptualization, Supervision; Validation; Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing.

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