4.7 Article

Lateropulsion After Hemispheric Stroke A Form of Spatial Neglect Involving Graviception

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 17, Pages E2160-E2171

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000011826

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Lateropulsion, or pusher syndrome, is characterized by body tilt, pushing, and resistance, adjusting body orientation in the roll plane to an incorrect reference of verticality. It may represent a form of spatial neglect, supporting the idea of 3D maps in the human brain involving an internal model of verticality.
Objective To test the hypothesis that lateropulsion is an entity expressing an impaired body orientation with respect to gravity in relation to a biased graviception and spatial neglect. Methods Data from the DOBRAS cohort (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03203109) were collected 30 days after a first hemisphere stroke. Lateral body tilt, pushing, and resistance were assessed with the Scale for Contraversive Pushing. Results Among 220 individuals, 72% were upright and 28% showed lateropulsion (tilters [14%] less severe than pushers [14%]). The 3 signs had very high factor loadings (>0.90) on a same dimension, demonstrating that lateropulsion was effectively an entity comprising body tilt (cardinal sign), pushing, and resistance. The factorial analyses also showed that lateropulsion was inseparable from the visual vertical (VV), a criterion referring to vertical orientation (graviception). Contralesional VV biases were frequent (44%), with a magnitude related to lateropulsion severity: upright -0.6 degrees (-2.9; 2.4), tilters -2.9 degrees (-7; 0.8), and pushers -12.3 degrees (-15.4; -8.5). Ipsilesional VV biases were less frequent and milder (p < 0.001). They did not deal with graviception, 84% being found in upright individuals. Multivariate, factorial, contingency, and prediction analyses congruently showed strong similarities between lateropulsion and spatial neglect, the latter encompassing the former. Conclusions Lateropulsion (pusher syndrome) is a trinity constituted by body tilt, pushing, and resistance. It is a way to adjust the body orientation in the roll plane to a wrong reference of verticality. Referring to straight above, lateropulsion might correspond to a form of spatial neglect (referring to straight ahead), which would advocate for 3D maps in the human brain involving the internal model of verticality.

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