Addressing the implementation gap in spatial neglect is critical to reducing disability, improving outcomes and controlling costs of stroke care, researchers suggest, in an article in Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports.
Spatial neglect affects more than half of stroke survivors, and 30% of individuals with traumatic brain injury, suggest authors A.M. Barrett, MD, of the Center for Stroke Rehabilitation Research at Kessler Foundation, and K.E. Houston, OD, MSc, of Harvard Medical School and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, according to a media release from Kessler Foundation.
Spatial neglect has implications for deficits in visual/perceptual and motor function, as well as cognitive function. Affected individuals are at risk for prolonged hospitalization, falls, poor motor recovery, and discharge to nursing care, they add.
Best practices in stroke rehabilitation should include spatial neglect care, which can improve stroke outcomes, including motor recovery, the authors recommend, adding that facilities incorporating assessment and treatment options in their stroke programs will find these processes bring them closer to their goals of quality improvement, lower costs of care, and improve quality of life for stroke survivors.
There is sufficient evidence to support implementation of a care pathway for spatial neglect care, the authors note, per the release.
This may raise the standard of care, by raising awareness of the importance of integrating spatial neglect assessment in stroke rehabilitation. Available guidelines (American Heart Association, Veterans Administration, National Institute for Care and Health Excellence) recommend routine assessment for spatial neglect but do not specify diagnostic tools.
Currently, an expanding network of U.S. rehabilitation facilities called Practice-RRuN, based at Kessler Foundation, implements an assessment tool based on the Catherine Bergego Scale. This assessment tool is part of the standard of care in the 14-member network, the release continues.
The authors cite prism adaptation treatment as a highly feasible available treatment option. This method has been shown to improve spatial neglect symptoms, as well as performance of daily activities such as self-care, walking, wheelchair navigation, reading, and writing.
“We anticipate that prism treatment will be feasible for therapists to administer,” Barrett says, “and that their time and effort will have a positive impact on the costs of care and the health and safety of stroke survivors.
To achieve optimal outcomes after stroke rehabilitation, spatial neglect research needs to be conducted in larger and more diverse study populations. Further research is needed to explore the neurobiology of spatial neglect, including brain interactions between spatial and motor systems. Incorporating neuroimaging techniques may yield biomarkers that will help identify candidates for clinical trials and treatment protocols, and may provide a way to measure the clinical course of spatial neglect and the effects of interventions, the authors conclude, in the release.
[Source(s): Kessler Foundation, EurekAlert]