RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Language and spatial attention can lateralize to the same hemisphere in healthy humans JF Neurology JO Neurology FD Lippincott Williams & Wilkins SP 1018 OP 1024 DO 10.1212/WNL.57.6.1018 VO 57 IS 6 A1 Flöel, A. A1 Knecht, S. A1 Lohmann, H. A1 Deppe, M. A1 Sommer, J. A1 Dräger, B. A1 Ringelstein, E.-B. A1 Henningsen, H. YR 2001 UL http://n.neurology.org/content/57/6/1018.abstract AB Background: Disorders of language classically occur after left brain lesions, and disorders of spatial attention after right brain lesions. It is unclear whether the hemispheric dissociation of functions is a fixed pattern of brain organization. Objective: The authors determined whether lateralization of language and lateralization of spatial attention also dissociate in people with atypical (i.e., right hemispheric) language dominance. Methods: The authors selected 10 subjects with typical, i.e., left hemispheric, and 10 with atypical, i.e., right hemispheric, language representation on a random basis from a sample of 326 healthy volunteers examined with functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTCD) for language dominance. In these subjects, hemispheric lateralization of cerebral perfusion during a line bisection task was determined with fTCD. Results: The authors found a dissociation between dominance for language and spatial attention in all but four subjects. In the latter subjects, there was a significant lateralization to the right hemisphere for both tasks. The four subjects showed normal intellectual, linguistic, and spatial performance, with normal EEG and MRI scans of the brain. Conclusion: Even in the absence of brain pathology, the same hemisphere can be dominant in control of both language and spatial attention.