Lecture 8 - Cognitive Deficits Following Stroke Flashcards
What cognitive domains may be affected following a stroke?
Attention, memory, executive function, perception/praxis, language.
You may get one area that then impacts another area.
What assessments are used for cognitive impairments following stroke?
Mini mental state examination, Montreal cognitive assessment and neuropsychological tests.
What is the Mini Mental State Examination (Folstein et al., 1975)?
The MMSE is a brief screening tool that provides a quantitative assessment of cognitive impairment of multiple domains:
- Orientation = ask simple questions e.g. who are you?
- Registration = required to repeat what objects are.
- Attention = count back in 7s for 100 or asked to spell word backwards.
- Recall = asked to recall objects from registration task.
- Language = may be asked to close eyes, or what the time is.
They are then given a score out of 30 with 30 indicating less impairment.
What are the strengths of the MMSE?
It is easy to complete, quick and inexpensive.
It also does not require training so can be used widely and it is easy to interpret with the scoring system.
What are the limitations of the MMSE?
It lacks sensitivity as it is not very detailed - this means it doesn’t pick out the people who score around the middle who may have major impairments in some areas.
It lacks evaluation of the executive function.
It may be confounded by age, level of education and sociocultural background.
Could be improved with the addition of other tests to improve sensitivity.
What is the Montreal Cognitive Assessment?
A battery of tests that measure a range of cognitive domains, it includes tasks such as:
- Clock draw task = have to remember a time on a clock and draw it.
- Picture naming task = asked to name what they see.
- Memory task = given a list of words and asked to recall
- Attention task = given list of letters and told every time the letter A appears, they need to tap.
- Abstraction task = given 2 objects and asked how they are related.
- Language assessment = read a sentence and asked to repeat it (tests comprehension and production) or may be given a letter and asked to name as many words beginning with that letter.
What are the strengths of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment?
It is more sensitive than the MMSE as you can see mild impairments in this test.
It is available in multiple languages etc. and is freely accessible.
What are limitations of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment?
It is relatively new so not as widely used as MMSE.
The reliability of it has not been thoroughly tested.
What is a neuropsychological test?
It is a really comprehensive battery of tests that looks at a wide range of functions with detailed tests:
- Visuospatial memory tests.
- Verbal learning test.
- Wechsler memory scale.
- Delis-Kaplan executive function system.
- Number/letter sequencing.
- Boston naming test.
- Wechsler adult intelligence scale.
- Phonemic/category fluency.
What are the strengths of neurological tests?
It is really comprehensive so should be more sensitive.
It looks at a wide range of cognitive domains so if there were any impairments it should find them.
What are the limitations of neuropsychological tests?
Because it is very thorough, it is also very time consuming and may cause the patient to get tired which could be a confounding factor.
Or they may have to do it across different days due to tiredness which then causes issues with reliability as you are getting the patient on a different day.
It also needs to be conducted by someone who has been trained.
What is unilateral spatial neglect?
It is failure to report, respond, attend or orientate to one side of the body (contralateral side) and comes under the perception, praxis domain.
In unilateral neglect, the parietal lobe is affected which is involved in sensory processing and orientation.
It is more common in patients with right side lesions (42%) than left side (8%). This is because the right side of the brain controls the visual field for both sides so if the lesion was in the left side you would still be able to see both visual fields.
How is unilateral spatial neglect assessed?
The line bisection task, clock drawing test and behavioural inattention test.
What is the line bisection test?
It consists of 18 horizontal lines drawn on a single piece of paper and patients are required to place a mark on each line that bisects it into 2 equal parts.
If have USN they deviate from the middle because they can’t process the full line.
This test can give some indication of having neglect but it is not a thorough method.
What are the strengths of the line bisection test?
It is simple, inexpensive and doesn’t require training.
What are the limitations of the line bisection task?
It lacks sensitivity and is not a thorough method for assessing USN.
What is the clock drawing test?
It provides a quick assessment of visuospatial and praxis abilities and may detect deficits in both attention and executive dysfunction.
Participants are asked to draw a certain time on a clock and if they have USN this will be difficult as they can’t process the full circle so they won’t draw numbers in the right places.
Scoring is based on if the numbers are in the right place, if they draw the right time on the clock and how much information is missing.
What are the strengths of the clock drawing test?
It is easy to administer and inexpensive.
It provides a more complete picture of cognitive function when used with other assessments.
It demonstrates reliability.
It correlates well with other assessments.