SOMATOSENSORY ASSESSMENT - CAN SEEING PRODUCE FEELING

Citation
Pw. Halligan et al., SOMATOSENSORY ASSESSMENT - CAN SEEING PRODUCE FEELING, Journal of neurology, 244(3), 1997, pp. 199-203
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Clinical Neurology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03405354
Volume
244
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
199 - 203
Database
ISI
SICI code
0340-5354(1997)244:3<199:SA-CSP>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
It is conventional to assess the status of the somatosensory system in such a way that patients cannot see whether or not they are being tou ched: either the part tested is shielded from view or the eyes are clo sed. The main clinical reason for this well-established constraint on method is to control for any expectations that the visual stimulus may generate in the patient. In this study we compare the assessment of l ight touch with and without visual feedback in 20 well-oriented and co operative patients after stroke, and 20 age-matched controls. The resu lts show that in 18 of the patients, visual feedback produced only sma ll (or no) differences in reports of sensation. Controls showed a simi lar result to these patients; visual feedback produced only small effe cts upon reported touch. In two patients, by contrast, sensation was c onfidently and reliably reported only when they viewed the affected li mb during assessment. In one of these patients, we demonstrate that '' suggestibility'' is not an appropriate description of the phenomenon. The conventional clinical method of somatosensory assessment would not have elicited this informative discrepancy between feeling in the two conditions of testing in these two patients. We accordingly suggest t hat it is valuable to test tactile perception with and without vision when diagnosing somatosensory loss after brain damage.