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Comprehending the nature of tactile disorders following brain damage is crucial to understand how the brain constructs sensory awareness. Stroke patients may be unaware of being touched on the affected hand if, simultaneously, they are touched on the unaffected hand (i.e., tactile extinction). More rarely, they feel touches on the two hands, when they are solely touched on the unaffected hand (i.e., synchiria). Using a novel assessment tool, we investigated whether in stroke patients with apparent intact tactile awareness on standard evaluation, tactile extinction might be possibly masked by phantom (synchiric) sensations (i.e., elicited by ipsilesional stimulation) arising exclusively during Double Simultaneous Stimulation (DSS). Patients with right (n = 17) and left (n = 8) hemisphere lesions and age-matched healthy controls (n = 13) were tested with the Tactile Quadrant Stimulation test, consisting in delivering unilateral or bilateral touches to one of four quadrants, identified on the participants' hands. In DSS trials, stimuli were applied to asymmetric quadrants. Participants reported the side(s) and then pointed to the site(s) of stimulation. We found that, with the exception of one patient who showed tactile extinction, about 50% of patients with overall intact tactile perception on classical evaluation, although reporting two stimuli in DSS, failed in pointing to the correct contralesional stimulated site. They reported the felt sensation in positions that corresponded to the ipsilesional stimulated sites. Thus apparent detections of contralesional touches in DSS were accounted for by 'phantom' sensations of ipsilesional stimulation that masked unawareness of contralesional touches when classic assessment was applied. Preliminary lesion analyses indicate that the symptom was associated with damage to structures often affected in tactile extinction. These findings, while unveiling important underestimation of the patients' neurological condition, provide a framework for investigating bihemispheric contributions to altered tactile perception following stroke.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2019.08.021 | DOI Listing |
Physiol Behav
October 2025
University of California, Department of Psychiatry, La Jolla, CA, 92093, USA.
Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) are a major cause of disability amongst military service members. In addition to combat-related head injuries, military personnel are vulnerable to repetitive blast-related TBIs due to the frequent use of small explosive charges for breaching and training. However, little is known about the functional consequences or recovery after repeated blast exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Stress
March 2025
Department of Biological Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Intense and chronic stress strengthens fear memories and increases the risk for mental disorders. Often stressful situations are experienced long before the appearance of the symptoms, but so far, little has been investigated on how distal stress alters fear memories. In a four-day paradigm, 131 healthy individuals were either assigned to the stress-group by means of the socially evaluated cold-pressor test (SECPT) or to the sham-group (control condition).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnat Rec (Hoboken)
November 2024
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
IEEE Trans Cybern
December 2023
In this work, we propose a multisensory mutual associative memory networks framework and memristive circuit to mimic the ability of the biological brain to make associations of information received simultaneously. The circuit inspired by neural mechanisms of associative memory cells mainly consists of three modules: 1) the storage neurons module, which encodes external multimodal information into the firing rate of spikes; 2) the synapse module, which uses the nonvolatility memristor to achieve weight adjustment and associative learning; and 3) the retrieval neuron module, which feeds the retrieval signal output from each sensory pathway to other sensory pathways, so that achieve mutual association and retrieval between multiple modalities. Different from other one-to-one or many-to-one unidirectional associative memory work, this circuit achieves bidirectional association from multiple modalities to multiple modalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFeNeurologicalSci
March 2023
Department of Neurology, Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, United States.
Acute hypoglycemia may mimic acute ischemic stroke, but to our knowledge this has never been reported as transient hemineglect syndrome. We present a 60-year-old male with known diabetes mellitus who was brought to the hospital as a stroke alert. The patient had undetectable glucose levels upon arrival of emergency medical services (EMS), therefore hypertonic glucose was given.
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