| Literature DB >> 22957249 |
Mary Pat McAndrews1, Melanie Cohn.
Abstract
Neuropsychologists assist in diagnosis (i.e., localization of dysfunction) and in prediction (i.e., how cognition may change following surgery) in individuals being considered for temporal lobe surgery. The current practice includes behavioural testing as well as mapping function via stimulation, inactivation, and (more recently) functional imaging. These methods have been providing valuable information in surgical planning for 60 years. Here, we discuss current assessment strategies and highlight how they are evolving, particularly with respect to integrating recent advances in cognitive neuroscience.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22957249 PMCID: PMC3420484 DOI: 10.1155/2012/925238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsy Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1348
Neuropsychological tests in common use in epilepsy surgical centres.
| Test name/domains | Description |
|---|---|
| Verbal memory | |
|
| |
| California Verbal Learning Test-II (CVLT-II) | Examinees recall a list of 16 words from 4 categories (furniture, vegetables, ways of travelling, and animals) after each of 5 learning trials. Retention is assessed by free recall and cued recall of the list following the presentation of interfering material and following a 20-minute delay period, as well as by delayed yes-no recognition. |
| Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT) | Examinees recall a list of 15 unrelated words after each of 5 presentations. Retention is assessed by free recall of the original list after a second list is presented and following a 20-minute delay period, as well as by delayed yes-no recognition trial or a recognition trial involving recognizing the studied words embedded in a prose. |
| Verbal Paired Associates I & II subtests—Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS), WMS-R, WMS-III, and WMS-IV | Measures relational memory of word pairs over repeated learning trials. After each presentation of the list of pairs, the first word is given and the examinee is required to provide its associate. Errors are corrected immediately. The format of the test has changed across versions in terms of number of pairs (from 8 to 14), types of pairs (both easy/related pairs and hard/unrelated pairs in most versions), number of learning trials (3 to 6), and the inclusion of a 20- to 30-minute delayed cued recall and delayed recognition trials (present since WMS-R). |
| Logical Memory I & II subtests—WMS, WMS-R, WMS-III and WMS-IV | Consists of immediate recall and delayed recall of two orally presented prose passages as well as yes-no delayed recognition of story elements. Some changes in test format and content have been introduced across versions. |
| Names subtest—Doors & People Test | Examinees read two lists of names (12 per list) and recognize these names on a four-alternative forced-choice recognition task. |
| Words subtest—Recognition Memory Test | Examinees rate 50 words as |
|
| |
| Visual memory | |
|
| |
| Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure | This task involves copying a complex figure, which provides a measure of construction skills and planning, followed by an unexpected recall and recognition tests given at various delays depending on the center's protocol. |
| Visual Reproduction I & II subtests—WMS, WMS-R, WMS-III, and WMS-IV | Four or five visual designs are shown for 10 seconds each and are reproduced from memory. Delayed reproduction and yes-no recognition are also done 20- to 25-minutes after learning. |
| Designs I & II (WMS-IV) | Measures memory for visual designs and their spatial locations. On each of four trials, 4 to 8 unfamiliar visual designs on a 4 × 4 grid are presented for 10 seconds. The examinees then reproduce the display by selecting the appropriate designs and placing them in their studied spatial location. Retention is also assessed by delayed trials given 20 to 30 minutes after learning. |
| Faces I & II subtests—WMS-III | Examinees study 24 colour photographs of faces that vary by age, sex, and race and then perform a yes-no recognition test for these pictures immediately following presentation and after a 25–35-minute delay period. |
| Faces subtest—Recognition Memory Test | Examinees rate 50 black-and-white photographs of male faces as |
| Doors subtest—Doors & People Test | Examinees study two series of photographs of doors (12 per series) and recognize these doors on a four-alternative forced-choice recognition task. |
|
| |
| Language | |
|
| |
| Boston Naming Test | Assesses visual confrontation naming using line drawings of common objects. Semantic and phonemic cues are provided for items that are not named within 20 seconds. Versions of different lengths exist (15, 30, and 60 items). |
| Verbal Fluency | Assesses the spontaneous production of words under particular search rules over a set period of time (usually 60 seconds per trial). Phonemic fluency and semantic fluency require examinees to generate words beginning with particular letters (e.g., F, A, and S) and belonging to particular categories (e.g., animals, fruits, and vegetables), respectively. Other rules have also been used, including proper names and actions. |
Figure 1Presurgical fMRI for language in patients with TLE. Two individuals with epileptic foci in the left temporal lobe were scanned using a panel of tasks involving 25-second blocks of verb generation, sentence completion, category fluency, and naming to confrontation, alternating with 20-second blocks of fixation. The case in (a) shows left-hemisphere dominance, and the case in (b) shows right hemisphere dominance. In figure, L: left and R: right; threshold is set to z > 2.25.
Figure 2Autobiographical memory profiles. fMRI maps illustrate regions demonstrating higher activation for during autobiographical memory recall (retrieving personal memories based on event cues) relative to semantic retrieval (sentence completion). Note that there is less activity in the epileptogenic mesial temporal region for both left and right TLE groups compared to healthy controls (n = 10 per group). In figure, L: left and R: right; threshold set at P < .0001, uncorrected.