Literature DB >> 23675339

Rehabilitation Interventions for Unilateral Neglect after Stroke: A Systematic Review from 1997 through 2012.

Nicole Y H Yang1, Dong Zhou, Raymond C K Chung, Cecilia W P Li-Tsang, Kenneth N K Fong.   

Abstract

A systematic review of the effectiveness of rehabilitation for persons with unilateral neglect (UN) after stroke was conducted by searching the computerized databases from 1997 through 2012. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of neglect treatment strategies for stroke patients which used the Behavioral Inattention Test (BIT) as the primary outcome measure were eligible for inclusion. Out of 201 studies initially identified, 12 RCTs covering 277 participants were selected for analysis. All had the same weakness of low power with smaller samples and limitation in the blinding of the design. Prism Adaptation (PA) was the most commonly used intervention while continuous Theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) appeared to be a new approach. Meta-analysis showed that for immediate effects, the BIT conventional subscore had a significant and large mean effect size (ES = 0.76; 95% CI 0.28-1.23; p = 0.002) whereas the BIT total score showed a modestly significant mean ES (ES = 0.55; 95% CI 0.16-0.94; p = 0.006). No significant mean ES in sensitivity analysis was found for long-lasting effects across all BIT outcomes. PA appeared to be the most effective intervention based on the results of pooled analysis. More rigorous studies should be done on repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) before it can be concluded that it is a promising treatment for UN.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Behavioral Inattention Test; rehabilitation; stroke; systematic review; unilateral neglect

Year:  2013        PMID: 23675339      PMCID: PMC3650319          DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci        ISSN: 1662-5161            Impact factor:   3.169


Introduction

Unilateral neglect (UN) is a heterogeneous perceptual disorder that often follows stroke, especially after right hemisphere lesion. Its most typical feature is failure to report or respond to stimuli presented from the contralateral space, including visual, somatosensory, auditory, and kinesthetic sources. Sufferers may even fail to perceive their own body parts (Mesulam, 1999). The reported incidence varies from 10 to 82% following right- and from 15 to 65% following left-hemisphere stroke (Plummer et al., 2003). Subject selection criteria, lesion site, the nature and timing of the assessment, and lack of agreement on assessment methods are all responsible for the variability in these reported rates (Stone et al., 1991; Azouvi et al., 2002). UN has a significant negative impact associated with functional recovery at home discharge (Jehkonen et al., 2006; Mutai et al., 2012). Different treatment approaches and assessment tools have been developed to evaluate and address UN. The most recent literature shows that rehabilitation can be classified under two types of behavioral approaches: recruiting the hemiplegic limbs to reduce spatial preference for the ipsilesional space, or improving awareness of the contralesional space to promote patients’ attention (Pierce and Buxbaum, 2002; Paci et al., 2010). More than 18 methods using these general approaches have been put into practice (Luauté et al., 2006) with varying results based on a large number of outcome measures. Although the reported quality is moderate for most of the RCTs in neglect rehabilitation (Paci et al., 2010), some interventions appear to be more promising. Comments have also been made that the effects of treatment are often task-specific or transient and cannot be generalized to daily functioning (Pierce and Buxbaum, 2002; Bowen et al., 2007). Due to a lack of evidence, it is also hard to report which approach is the optimal recommendation for clinical practice (Luauté et al., 2006), and interestingly, professional therapists rarely use these scientifically proven interventions (Petzold et al., 2012). Many RCTs have employed “pencil-and-paper” tasks, including line bisection, cancelation tasks, copying, and drawing, as treatment outcomes for UN. One of the commonest tests, and one that has been used extensively as an outcome measure for UN, is the Behavioral Inattention Test (BIT) (Bowen et al., 1999, 2007). This is a criterion-referenced test for UN or visual inattention in patients suffering from stroke or brain injuries, comprising two parts: the conventional and the behavioral subtests (Halligan et al., 1991). The conventional subtests include six traditional paper-and-pencil tasks: line crossing, letter cancelation, star cancelation, figure copying, line bisection, and representative drawing. The behavioral subtests consist of nine simulated daily living tasks: picture scanning, telephone dialing, menu reading, article reading, telling and setting the time, coin sorting, address and sentence copying, map navigation, and card sorting. Both parts can be used separately in clinical for impairment and function level assessments, and it has been recommended as a good predictor of functional performance in daily living with good construct and predictive validity (Hartmanmaeir and Katz, 1995). The aim of this study was to develop a systematic review to assess the effectiveness of rehabilitation for UN as measured by the BIT and to evaluate the effects of the interventions reported in the RCTs using a meta-analysis.

Methods

Database

We searched the following electronic databases for trials published in English; PubMed/Medline (1965+ via EbscoHost), PsycINFO (1806+), physiotherapy evidence database (PEDro), Science Direct, CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, 1982+), and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL). We also hand-searched the bibliographies of all studies ordered in full text. Date of publication was limited from January 1997 to June 2012 as most of the full-text electronic versions of journal papers are available since 1997. The terms used in the search were: cerebrovascular accident OR stroke; neglect; visuo-spatial neglect; visual neglect; unilateral neglect; and hemisphere neglect. The search was limited to RCTs involving adults aged 19 or over.

Selection criteria

We included all RCTs that sought to identify the effectiveness of any type of rehabilitation intervention in UN in adult stroke patients diagnosed by clinical examination and/or classical neuropsychological tests. Only studies which reported the BIT (Wilson et al., 1987) as the primary outcome measure were included. The BIT includes a score for the conventional subtest (BIT-C) and/or the behavioral subtest (BIT-B) as well as the total score [BIT (Total)]. We excluded observational studies and case reports as well as cross-over design studies; studies where full text was not available; studies with a sample size of less than five in each group; and those rated as 4 or less out of 10 by the PEDro in the quality assessment described below. Cross-over design studies were excluded in our review as they usually confounded the estimates of the treatment effects with carry-over and learning effects (Leslie and Mary, 2007).

Quality assessment

After the database search, two reviewers assessed the methodological quality of the trials according to the PEDro scale. This was developed specifically for evaluating the quality of studies aiming to compare the effectiveness of rehabilitation (Verhagen et al., 1998; Sherrington et al., 2000) and has been proved to be valid in measuring the methodological quality of clinical trials. There are 11 items in the PEDro scale. The first criterion, item eligibility, is not scored as it is used as a component of external validity; the remaining items yield a total score from 10 (RCT that meets all items) to 0 (RCT that does not meet any item) (Paci et al., 2010). The PEDro scale item scores can be summed to obtain a total score that can be used as interval data for parametric statistical analysis (Bhogal et al., 2005; de Morton, 2009). The PEDro scale classifies studies as high or low quality based on a cut-off score of six (Maher et al., 2003). Articles scoring six or higher are considered of high quality and low-quality studies score less than six.

Data extraction and analysis

Each selected study was carefully assessed against the inclusion criteria, and the necessary information and characteristics summarized in a table. We calculated Cohen’s d on individual treatment effect size (ES) for these studies and compared the effectiveness among different interventions. Meta-analysis on overall treatment effectiveness was done with Review Manager Version 5.0 (Copenhagen: The Nordic Cochrane Center, The Cochrane Collaboration, 2012). The standardized mean difference (SMD) was presented as the ES and its 95% confidence interval (CI) computed. Because of the heterogeneity of the interventions, we could only perform a pooling for meta-analysis for a single intervention reported in two or more trials. The test of heterogeneity was used to assess the potential heterogeneity across studies. If heterogeneity existed, a random-effect model was used. The random-effect approach assumes that the ES from each trial is a random sample from a larger population of possible ES. Otherwise, the fixed-effect model was used. A sensitivity analysis was also used to assess the impact of overall treatment effectiveness by excluding each trial once at a time.

Results

Figure 1 illustrates the selection process. The initial search yielded 201 citations from January 1997 through June 2012. After removing duplicates, 153 citations remained. Based on the title and abstract of the articles, 32 potentially relevant articles were selected. After careful evaluation by the reviewers, we identified 25 clinical trials (Wiart et al., 1997; Robertson et al., 2002; Harvey et al., 2003; Pizzamiglio et al., 2004; Katz et al., 2005; Fong et al., 2007; Nys et al., 2008; Schroder et al., 2008; Ertekin et al., 2009; Luukkainen-Markkula et al., 2009; Polanowska et al., 2009; Serino et al., 2009; Song et al., 2009; Tsang et al., 2009; Saevarsson et al., 2010; Turton et al., 2010; Ferreira et al., 2011; Kamada et al., 2011; Kim et al., 2011; Làdavas et al., 2011; Mizuno et al., 2011; Welfringer et al., 2011; Gorgoraptis et al., 2012; Ianes et al., 2012; Koch et al., 2012) to be included in the final assessment. Of these, 12 articles were included in our final review (Robertson et al., 2002; Harvey et al., 2003; Fong et al., 2007; Nys et al., 2008; Luukkainen-Markkula et al., 2009; Serino et al., 2009; Tsang et al., 2009; Turton et al., 2010; Ferreira et al., 2011; Làdavas et al., 2011; Mizuno et al., 2011; Koch et al., 2012) with the others excluded because the BIT was not used as the primary outcome measure.
Figure 1

Overview of the search and selection process.

Overview of the search and selection process. The quality of all 12 RCTs was fair to good (Table 1). Four (33.3%) were identified as of fair quality as their scores were below six in the scale. Two studies (Mizuno et al., 2011; Koch et al., 2012) used double-blind designs whereas others were mostly single-blind.
Table 1

PEDro scores of included studies.

StudiesEligibility1, Random allocation2, Concealed allocation3, Baseline comparability4, Blind subjects5, Blind therapists6, Blind assessors7, Adequate follow-up8, Intention-to-treat analysis9, Between-group comparisons10, Point estimates variabilityScoreQuality
ITEMS
Nys et al. (2008)Yes10110010116/10Good
Serino et al. (2009)Yes00110010115/10Fair
Turton et al. (2010)Yes11000110116/10Good
Mizuno et al. (2011)Yes11110110118/10Good
Làdavas et al. (2011)Yes10110100116/10Good
Robertson et al. (2002)Yes10100110116/10Good
Luukkainen-Markkula et al. (2009)Yes11100010015/10Fair
Fong et al. (2007)Yes10100110116/10Good
Tsang et al., 2009Yes11100100116/10Good
Harvey et al. (2003)Yes10110010105/10Fair
Koch et al. (2012)Yes11111110119/10Good
Ferreira et al. (2011)No10100010115/10Fair
PEDro scores of included studies.

Characteristics of the studies

Descriptions of the 12 articles reviewed are listed in Table 2. A total of 277 subjects with UN were included in this analysis. All were adults with right brain damage due to stroke; most had a diagnosis of first single right hemisphere stroke. The duration from stroke onset to study covered the period from the acute (≤4 weeks) to the chronic phase (≥6 months), but most studies were conducted in the subacute and chronic phases after stroke. All studies used similar selection criteria.
Table 2

Characteristics of included studies.

StudiesMethods
Interventions
BIT results
TypeStudy designControlGroups subjects (n)Duration from onset to treatmentTreatmentRegimeDurationImmediateLong-term
Nys et al. (2008)PAsingle-blind RCTPlacebo (neutral goggles)n = 16 PA gp = 10 CT gp = 6≤4 weeksWore pair of goggles fitted with wide-field point-to-point prismatic lenses shifted their visual field 10°/0° rightward and do some fast pointing movements30 min/session 4-days-in-row sessions4 daysBIT-C (−); BIT-B (−); follow-up = 1 month
Serino et al. (2009)PAsingle-blind pseudo-RCTPlacebo (neutral goggles)n = 20 PA gp = 10 CT gp = 10≥1 monthWore prismatic lenses, which shifted their visual field 10°/0°rightward and pointing movements30 min/Session 10 daily sessions within 2 weeks2 weeksBIT (+)BIT (+); follow-up = 1 month
Turton et al. (2010)PAsingle-blind RCTPlacebo (flat plain glass)n = 36 PA gp = 17 CT gp = 19 (1 drop-out) (1 drop-out)≥20 daysWore 10 diopter, 6 degree prisms using index finger to touch a bold vertical line on screenOnce a day, each working day2 weeksBIT (−)BIT (−); follow-up = 8 weeks
Mizuno et al. (2011)PAdouble-masked RCTPlacebo (neutral glasses)n = 38 PA gp = 18 CT gp = 20≤3 monthsWore prism glasses shifted visual field 12° to right and repeat pointing tasks20 min/Session bid, 5 days/week2 weeksBIT-C (−); BIT-B (−)BIT-C (−); BIT-B (−); follow-up until discharge
Làdavas et al. (2011)PAsingle-blind pseudo-RCTPlacebo (neutral glasses)n = 30 TPA gp = 10 CPA gp = 10 CT gp = 10≥2 monthsWore wide-field prismatic lenses inducing a 10° shift visual field to right and repeat pointing tasks30 min/Session one per day, 10 sessions2 weeksTPA:BIT-B (+); BIT-C (+); CPA:BIT-C (−); BIT-B (−)No follow-up
Robertson et al. (2002)LAsingle-blind RCTDummy devicen = 40 LA + PT = 19 (2 drop-out) PT = 21 (2 drop-out)LA: 152.8 ± 142.4 PT: 152.1 ± 117.9Using a semi-automatic device for limb activation combined with perceptual training45 min/Session once a week 12 sessions12 weeksBIT-B (−)BIT-B (−); follow-up = 18–24 months
Luukkainen-Markkula et al. (2009)LAsingle-blind RCTConventional visual scanning trainingn = 12 LA gp = 6 CT gp = 6≤6 monthsArm activation training (determined by the individual hand and arm motor status assessed by WMFT)Total 48 h of therapy3 weeksBIT-C (+)BIT-C (+) follow-up = 6 months
Fong et al. (2007)TRTR + EPsingle-blind RCTConventional OTn = 54 TR gp = 19 TR + EP gp = 20 CT gp = 15≤8 weeksTrunk rotation was performed in three different positions: supine lying on a plinth, unsupported sitting on a plinth, and standing in a standing frame1 h/Session 5 times/week30 daysBIT-B (−); BIT-C (−); BIT (−)BIT-B (−); BIT-C (−); BIT (−); follow-up = 60 days
Tsang et al. (2009)EPsingle-blind RCTConventional OTn = 34 EP gp = 17 CT: 22.18 ± 15.87EP: 21.5 ± 21.67Underwent occupational therapy with special glasses blocking the right half visual field30 min ADL +30 min NDT for UL/day4 weeksBIT-C (+)No follow-up
CT gp = 17
Harvey et al. (2003)VFRCTSame activities but without feedbackn = 14 VF gp = 7 CT gp = 75–25 monthsExperimenter-administered practice of rod lifting with judge center grids for proprioceptive and visual feedback1 h/day with 3 days, then 10 days of home-based intervention3 days/2 weeksBIT-C (+); BIT-B (−)BIT-C (+); BIT-B (−); follow-up = 1 month
Koch et al. (2012)TBSdouble-blind RCTSham coil angled 90°n = 18 TBS gp = 9 CT gp = 9≥1 months (43 ± 16 days)3-pulse bursts at 50 Hz repeated every 200 ms for 40 s, 80% AMT over the left PPC2 Sessions/day, 15 min interval; 5 days/week2 weeksBIT-B (+); BIT-C (+); BIT (+)BIT-B (+); BIT-C (+); BIT (+); follow-up = 1 month
Ferreira et al. (2011)MP VSTsingle-blind RCTConventional PT without any treatment for neglectn = 15 MP gp = 5 VST gp = 5 CT gp = 5≥3 monthsVS: the protocol included 4 tasks: 2 directed to the extrapersonal space and 2 addressing peripersonal neglect; MP: included 4 tasks: 2 tasks of motor imagery and 2 of visual imagery1 h/Session twice per week5 weeksVST: BIT-C (+); MP: BIT-C (−)VST: BIT-C (+); MP:BIT-C (−) follow-up = 2 months

PA, prism adaptation; LA, limb activation; TR, trunk rotation; EP, eye patching; VF, visuomotor feedback; TBS, theta-burst stimulation; MP, mental practice; VST, visual scanning training; BIT (Total), total score on Behavioral Inattention Test; BIT-C, BIT conventional subtest; BIT-B, BIT behavioral subtest; OT, occupational therapy; PT, physiotherapy.

Characteristics of included studies. PA, prism adaptation; LA, limb activation; TR, trunk rotation; EP, eye patching; VF, visuomotor feedback; TBS, theta-burst stimulation; MP, mental practice; VST, visual scanning training; BIT (Total), total score on Behavioral Inattention Test; BIT-C, BIT conventional subtest; BIT-B, BIT behavioral subtest; OT, occupational therapy; PT, physiotherapy. Among the 12 studies, 5 (Nys et al., 2008; Serino et al., 2009; Làdavas et al., 2011; Mizuno et al., 2011) studied the effectiveness of prism adaptation (PA). There were differences in the PA procedure used; one study (Nys et al., 2008) used repetitive PA for a short period while another used different feedback strategies in PA (terminal and concurrent prism adaptation). During terminal PA, only the final part of the pointing movement is visible and PA relies most strongly on a strategic recalibration of visuomotor eye–hand (Làdavas et al., 2011). In contrast, in concurrent PA the second half of the pointing movement is visible, and thus adaptation mainly consists of a realignment of proprioceptive coordinates (Làdavas et al., 2011). All five studies used the same control methods with neutral goggles. Two articles (Robertson et al., 2002; Luukkainen-Markkula et al., 2009) applied limb activation. Other studies used different interventions; visuomotor feedback, virtual reality, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), and continuous Theta-burst stimulation (cTBS). Compared to a previous review (Luauté et al., 2006), no new intervention was reported in our review during the time period stated except for cTBS. All studies investigated a single treatment, except for one RCT (Fong et al., 2007) which investigated the effectiveness of a combination of two different methods, namely trunk rotation and eye patching. The duration of treatment ranged from 4 days (Nys et al., 2008) to 5 weeks (Ferreira et al., 2011), but for half of the studies was 30 min per session for 5 sessions per week over 2 weeks, giving a total of 10 sessions. All the trials were conducted in hospitals except for one (Harvey et al., 2003) which involved self-administered home-based practice for 2 weeks. Apart from the BIT, the outcome for neglect severity included the Catherine Bergego Scale (CBS), the Bell Cancelation Test, reading, computerized visual search tasks, and paper-and-pencil neglect tests. In all studies, functional outcomes were included, namely the Functional Independence Measure, the Barthel Index, upper limb motor functions (the Wolf Motor Function Test and the Modified Motor Assessment Scale), and the Stroke Impairment Assessment Set. Three studies (Serino et al., 2009; Turton et al., 2010; Ferreira et al., 2011) used the BIT (Total) only; three (Nys et al., 2008; Làdavas et al., 2011; Mizuno et al., 2011) used both the BIT-C and the BIT-B separately as outcomes; and two (Fong et al., 2007; Koch et al., 2012) used the BIT (Total) and both the BIT-C and BIT-B as outcomes. Only one study (Robertson et al., 2002) used only the BIT-B as the outcome.

Effects of rehabilitation interventions

We applied a meta-analysis on all outcomes to calculate SMD and 95% CI using random-effects models. A comparison of the results of both the immediate and long-lasting effects is presented in forest plots (Figures 2 and 3).
Figure 2

Rehabilitation interventions versus any control, outcome: immediate effects.

Figure 3

Rehabilitation interventions versus any control, outcome: long-lasting effects.

Rehabilitation interventions versus any control, outcome: immediate effects. Rehabilitation interventions versus any control, outcome: long-lasting effects.

Immediate effects of interventions

Figure 2 shows the forest plot of the immediate effects of the interventions covered in the 12 studies. The meta-analysis shows that there was significant heterogeneity across the studies, so the random-effect model was chosen. The BIT-C had a significant mean ES of 0.76 (95% CI, 0.28–1.23; p = 0.002). The BIT-B showed an insignificant mean ES of 0.37 (95% CI, −0.19 to 0.91; p = 0.17), and the BIT (Total) a statistically significant mean ES of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.16–0.94; p = 0.006). The sensitivity of each trial on the mean ES was also assessed by excluding each trial one at a time. The overall results were the same even when any single trial was eliminated.

Long-lasting effects of rehabilitation interventions

Figure 3 shows the forest plot of the long-lasting effects of the interventions studied. The meta-analysis shows that none of the ES were significant for the BIT outcomes except the BIT-C (p = 0.05). The sensitivity of each trial on the mean ES was also evaluated by excluding one trial at a time, but the results were not significant (p > 0.05). To find out the optimal intervention for UN, Cohen’s d was calculated on the individual ES of each approach as the difference between the pre- and posttest means for the single treatment group divided by the SD of the pretest scores. There was more than one paper covering PA, so we pooled the ES of PA in three studies for the BIT-C, two for the BIT-B, and two for the BIT (Total) before conducting a relative comparison of the ES of all studies. The results showed that for immediate effects, after pooling, PA had the highest ES as measured by the BIT-C and the BIT-B, while cTBS had the highest ES measured by the BIT (Total). All interventions showed low ES for long-lasting effects (Tables 3 and 4).
Table 3

Immediate effect size of each rehabilitation intervention.

OutcomesStudyInterventionEffect size
BIT-CLàdavas et al. (2011) (1)PA1.31 (−0.26, 2.88) (pooled)
Làdavas et al. (2011) (2)
Mizuno et al. (2011)
Ferreira et al. (2011)VST1.16 (−0.24, 2.56)
Harvey et al. (2003)VF1.15 (−0.25, 2.55)
Tsang et al. (2009)EP0.71 (0.02, 1.41)
Fong et al. (2007) (1)TR0.50 (−0.19, 1.19)
Luukkainen-Markkula et al. (2009)LA0.27 (−0.87, 1.41)
Fong et al. (2007) (2)TR + EP0.19 (−0.48, 0.86)
BIT-BLàdavas et al. (2011) (1)PA0.86 (−0.45, 2.18) (pooled)
Mizuno et al. (2011)
Fong et al. (2007) (1)TR0.16 (−0.52, 0.84)
Fong et al. (2007) (2)TR + EP0.15 (−0.52, 0.82)
Robertson et al. (2002)LA−0.08 (−0.70, 0.54)
BIT (Total)Koch et al. (2012)TBS1.46 (0.39, 2.53)
Serino et al. (2009)PA0.55 (0.16, 0.94) (pooled)
Turton et al. (2010)
Fong et al. (2007) (1)TR0.40 (−0.28, 1.09)
Fong et al. (2007) (2)TR + EP0.18 (−0.49, 0.85)
Table 4

Long-lasting effect size of each rehabilitation intervention.

ItemsStudyInterventionEffect size
BIT-CMizuno et al. (2011)PA0.52 (−0.07, 1.11) (pooled)
Nys et al. (2008)
Luukkainen-Markkula et al. (2009)LA0.38 (−0.76, 1.53)
Fong et al. (2007) (1)TR0.26 (−0.52, 1.03)
Fong et al. (2007) (2)TR + EP0.25 (−0.47, 0.97)
BIT-BFong et al. (2007) (1)TR0.26 (−0.51, 1.03)
Fong et al. (2007) (2)TR + EP0.22 (−0.50, 0.94)
Mizuno et al. (2011)PA0.03 (−0.55, 0.60) (pooled)
Nys et al. (2008)
Robertson et al. (2002)LA−0.23 (−0.85, 0.40)
BIT (Total)Fong et al. (2007) (1)TR0.27 (−0.50, 1.05)
Fong et al. (2007) (2)TR + EP0.24 (−0.48, 0.96)
Koch et al. (2012)TBS1.97 (0.79, 3.14)
Serino et al. (2009)PA−0.06 (−0.57, 0.44) (pooled)
Turton et al. (2010)
Immediate effect size of each rehabilitation intervention. Long-lasting effect size of each rehabilitation intervention.

Pooled effects of PA on UN

The pooled ES of the single intervention PA on each BIT outcome were also analyzed (Table 5). No statistically significant results were found for either immediate or long-lasting effects as reflected in the BIT outcomes with significant heterogeneity.
Table 5

PA intervention on neglect.

Outcome or subgroupStudiesParticipantsStatistical methodEffect estimate
Immediate effects5216Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)0.89 (0.27, 1.51)
BIT-C374Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)1.31 (−0.26, 2.88)
BIT-B374Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)0.86 (−0.45, 2.18)
BIT (Total)268Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)0.59 (−0.02, 1.19)
Long-lasting effects4125Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)0.15 (−0.20, 0.51)
BIT-C247Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)0.52 (−0.07, 1.11)
BIT-B116Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)−0.04 (−1.06, 0.97)
BIT (Total)262Std. mean difference (IV, random, 95% CI)−0.06 (−0.57, 0.44)
PA intervention on neglect.

Discussion

Our systematic review indicates that there is modest evidence for the use of PA to reduce UN in stroke, with immediate and long-lasting effects, and eye patching as shown by BIT-C scores for immediate effects. Other studies obtained positive effects from the use of visual scanning training (Ferreira et al., 2011), visuomotor feedback (Harvey et al., 2003), and TBS (Koch et al., 2012). Since Koch et al. (2012) only report the BIT (Total) and not the BIT-C and BIT-B subscale scores, it is impossible to draw any conclusion that rTMS is better than PA in improving the performance of tasks in the BIT-C and the BIT-B for neglect patients as no comparison could be done. According to this review, PA is inclined to exhibit the highest ES for immediate effects, but this was not statistically significant as the 95% CI crossed over the zero point. The possible neural mechanism underlying the therapeutic effect of PA is that it reduces spatial neglect by enhancing the recruitment of intact brain areas responsible for visuo-spatial output through short-term sensori-motor plasticity pathways (Rossetti et al., 1998; Luauté et al., 2006). Although this technique has produced some improvement in a wide range of neglect symptoms, especially visual (Shiraishi et al., 2010; Mizuno et al., 2011; Rusconi and Carelli, 2012), some contradictory results have also been reported (Ferber et al., 2003; Rousseaux et al., 2006). The inconsistent results are probably due to the lack of comparability of treatment apparatus, treatment duration, the tasks used to assess PA effects, and post-stroke duration. Similar to PA, hemiplegic half-field eye patching is another compensational intervention for neglect which works by blocking the ipsilesional visual field. The initial study by Tsang et al. (2009) demonstrates a significant result with an ES of 0.71 immediately after intervention. More good-quality RCTs are needed to assess its long-lasting effects on UN. Transcranial magnetic stimulation is a safe and non-invasive procedure to detect or modulate brain activity by passing a strong brief electrical current through an insulated wired coil placed on the skull which generates a transient magnetic field in the brain (Hummel and Cohen, 2006). TBS is a kind of rTMS using a lower stimulation intensity and a shorter time of stimulation to induce long-lasting effects in the cortex (Cárdenas-Morales et al., 2010) which demonstrates a relatively high ES as measured by the BIT total scores discussed in this review. TMS has become a popular method to stimulate the human brain, with rTMS attracting particular interest for its therapeutic potential to modify cortical excitability (Funke and Benali, 2011), which sheds light on the use of the inter-hemispheric rivalry model in explaining the recovery after neglect disorder in stroke patients. According to the literature, rTMS induces and repairs the inter-hemispheric imbalance (a neglect-like behavior) in the left or right posterior parietal cortex in healthy humans (Kinsbourne, 1977, 1994; Oliveri et al., 2001; Rounis et al., 2007). Based on this model, some studies have explored whether the use of inhibitory rTMS over the contralesional hemisphere to reduce the pathological hyperactivity of either hemisphere may be useful in promoting recovery from neglect after stroke with promising results (Oliveri et al., 2001; Brighina et al., 2003; Shindo et al., 2006; Koch et al., 2008; Nyffeler et al., 2009; Song et al., 2009). Compared to traditional standard cognitive intervention, rTMS can accelerate clinical recovery (Oliveri et al., 2001; Shindo et al., 2006; Song et al., 2009; Paik and Paik, 2010). It seems that patients more severely affected at baseline also benefited more from this intervention. However, the small sample size of the TBS study makes it impossible to draw any conclusion based on robust evidence. There may be a publication bias whereby large studies will report small ES whereas small studies will report large ES. This review cannot determine the best time to commence neglect rehabilitation interventions, because most participants in the studies included here were recruited in either the subacute or chronic phases. Only two studies implemented rehabilitation within 1 month of stroke (Fong et al., 2007; Nys et al., 2008). As most of the spontaneous recovery after stroke happens in the first month (Kerkhoff and Schenk, 2012), further research is necessary to determine the effects of early but specific intervention for UN compared to conventional rehabilitation in order to avoid the confounding effect of spontaneous recovery. Neglect is the best single predictor of long-term functional impairment and poor rehabilitation outcome in the early stage (Jehkonen et al., 2001; Nys et al., 2005). One study (He et al., 2007) based on neuroimaging shows that 2 weeks after stroke, the normally functional connectivity between the left and right dorsal parietal cortex was disrupted, with the degree of breakdown correlated with the severity of left spatial neglect. It is therefore reasonable that patients should start a neglect intervention as soon as possible in the acute stage, in order to avoid non-use of the hemiplegic limbs, by increasing multisensory inputs or stimulation to the ipsilateral brain regions, and thus slowing down the secondary changes in the brain related to neglect. For further research, we also recommend adequate follow-up to maximize the benefits and monitor the persistence of the effect of neglect rehabilitation interventions.

Limitations of the review

The review has some limitations. It is constrained by the quality of the studies included, none of which scored the intention-to-treat analysis. The blindness design was the biggest weakness of most of these RCTs. The heterogeneity of the studies means that this meta-analysis is less powerful and cannot identify conclusively the optimal treatment approach.

Conclusion

The results of this review confirm that PA appears to be the most common and effective rehabilitation intervention for UN, and that rTMS might be a promising approach for future treatment. As shown by the insignificant long-lasting effects, rehabilitation interventions often had a transient impact and could not be generalized across time to an improvement in daily functioning. All studies faced the same weakness of low power with smaller samples and a limitation in the blindness design. More rigorous studies of various interventions should be done before coming to a firm conclusion.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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4.  Validity of the Behavioral Inattention Test (BIT): relationships with functional tasks.

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5.  Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation to hemispatial neglect in patients after stroke: an open-label pilot study.

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8.  Occupational therapy treatment with right half-field eye-patching for patients with subacute stroke and unilateral neglect: a randomised controlled trial.

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Journal:  Disabil Rehabil       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 3.033

Review 9.  Cognitive rehabilitation for spatial neglect following stroke.

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Review 1.  Update on the Clinical Approach to Spatial Neglect.

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Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2019-04-04       Impact factor: 5.081

2.  Ventral attention and motor network connectivity is relevant to functional impairment in spatial neglect after right brain stroke.

Authors:  A M Barrett; Olga Boukrina; Soha Saleh
Journal:  Brain Cogn       Date:  2018-12-03       Impact factor: 2.310

Review 3.  Transcranial direct current stimulation in neglect rehabilitation after stroke: a systematic review.

Authors:  B González-Rodriguez; N Serradell-Ribé; R Viejo-Sobera; J P Romero-Muñoz; Elena M Marron
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2022-09-22       Impact factor: 6.682

4.  Frontal lesions predict response to prism adaptation treatment in spatial neglect: A randomised controlled study.

Authors:  Kelly M Goedert; Peii Chen; Anne L Foundas; A M Barrett
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rehabil       Date:  2018-03-20       Impact factor: 2.868

5.  Dissociations within neglect-related reading impairments: Egocentric and allocentric neglect dyslexia.

Authors:  Margaret Jane Moore; Nir Shalev; Celine R Gillebert; Nele Demeyere
Journal:  J Clin Exp Neuropsychol       Date:  2020-02-17       Impact factor: 2.475

6.  Using brain potentials to understand prism adaptation: the error-related negativity and the P300.

Authors:  Stephane J MacLean; Cameron D Hassall; Yoko Ishigami; Olav E Krigolson; Gail A Eskes
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2015-06-12       Impact factor: 3.169

7.  Prism adaptation and spatial neglect: the need for dose-finding studies.

Authors:  Kelly M Goedert; Jeffrey Y Zhang; A M Barrett
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2015-04-30       Impact factor: 3.169

8.  Introduction to the research topic novel insights in rehabilitation of neglect.

Authors:  Stefan Van der Stigchel; Tanja C W Nijboer
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-14       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  Recovery of Visuospatial Neglect Subtypes and Relationship to Functional Outcome Six Months After Stroke.

Authors:  Margaret J Moore; Kathleen Vancleef; M Jane Riddoch; Celine R Gillebert; Nele Demeyere
Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair       Date:  2021-07-16       Impact factor: 3.919

10.  Galvanic vestibular stimulation in hemi-spatial neglect.

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Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2014-01-29
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