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August 27, 2013; 81 (9) Article

Triple dissociation of attention networks in stroke according to lesion location

Paul Rinne, Mursyida Hassan, Despina Goniotakis, Kiran Chohan, Pankaj Sharma, Dawn Langdon, David Soto, Paul Bentley
First published July 31, 2013, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182a2ca34
Paul Rinne
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Mursyida Hassan
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Despina Goniotakis
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Kiran Chohan
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Pankaj Sharma
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Dawn Langdon
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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David Soto
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Paul Bentley
From the Division of Brain Sciences (P.R., M.H., D.G., P.S., D.S., P.B.), Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London; and the Department of Psychology (K.C., D.L.), Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
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Citation
Triple dissociation of attention networks in stroke according to lesion location
Paul Rinne, Mursyida Hassan, Despina Goniotakis, Kiran Chohan, Pankaj Sharma, Dawn Langdon, David Soto, Paul Bentley
Neurology Aug 2013, 81 (9) 812-820; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182a2ca34

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Abstract

Objective: To determine whether behavioral dissociations and interactions occur between the attentional functions—alerting, orienting, and conflict resolution—depending upon stroke location and to determine the approximate proportion of patients who can be classified into 1 of these 3 anatomical networks.

Methods: We recruited 110 anatomically unselected acute stroke patients and 62 age-matched controls. Subjects underwent the attention network test (ANT), which provides a measure of each attention type. Their performance was related to lesion anatomy on MRI using a voxel-lesion mapping approach.

Results: Patients as a whole performed poorer than controls, but there were no group differences in the size of attentional effects. Specific deficits in 1 of the 3 ANT-tested functions were found in the following lesion locations: alerting deficiency with bilateral anteromedial thalamus and upper brainstem (17% of patients); orienting impairment with right pulvinar and right temporoparietal cortex (15%); conflict resolution with bilateral prefrontal and premotor areas (23%). Lesions to right frontoparietal regions also modified interactions among the 3 types of attention.

Conclusions: More than half of all stroke patients can be expected to have a lesion location classifiable into 1 of the 3 principal attention networks. Our results have potential implications for therapy personalization in focal brain diseases including stroke.

GLOSSARY

ANOVA=
analysis of variance;
ANT=
attention network test;
DWI=
diffusion-weighted imaging;
RMCR=
right middle corona radiata;
RT=
reaction time;
RTPJ=
right temporoparietal junction;
SLF=
superior longitudinal fasciculus

Footnotes

  • Go to Neurology.org for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.

  • Supplemental data at www.neurology.org

  • Editorial, page 782

  • Received October 3, 2012.
  • Accepted in final form April 22, 2013.
  • © 2013 American Academy of Neurology
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