Does visuospatial neglect contribute to standing balance within the first 12 weeks post-stroke? A prospective longitudinal cohort study

Publication date

2024-12

Authors

Embrechts, Elissa
Schröder, Jonas
Nijboer, Tanja C WISNI 0000000390969706
van der Waal, Charlotte
Lafosse, Christophe
Truijen, Steven
Saeys, Wim

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Background: Visuospatial neglect (VSN) has been suggested to limit standing balance improvement post-stroke. However, studies investigating this association longitudinally by means of repeated within-subject measurements early post-stroke are lacking. This prospective longitudinal cohort study evaluates the longitudinal association of egocentric and allocentric VSN severity with 1) standing balance independence and 2) postural control and weight-bearing asymmetry (WBA) during quiet standing, in the first 12 weeks post-stroke. Methods: Thirty-six hemiplegic individuals after a first-ever unilateral stroke were evaluated at weeks 3, 5, 8 and 12 post-stroke. Egocentric and allocentric VSN severity were evaluated using the Broken Hearts Test. The standing unperturbed item of the Berg Balance Scale (BBS-s) was used to clinically evaluate standing independence. Posturographic measures included measures of postural control (mediolateral (ML)/anteroposterior (AP) net center-of-pressure velocities (COPvel)) and WBA during quiet standing. A linear mixed model was used to examine longitudinal associations between egocentric and allocentric VSN, and BBS-s, COPvel-ML, COPvel-AP and WBA within the first 12 weeks post-stroke. Results: Egocentric (β = -0.08, 95%CI[-0.15;-0.01], P =.029) and allocentric VSN severity (β = -0.09, 95%CI[-0.15; -0.04], P =.002) were significant independent factors for BBS-s scores in the first 12 weeks post-stroke. Egocentric and allocentric VSN were no significant independent factors for COPvel-ML, COPvel-AP and WBA in the first 12 weeks post-stroke. Conclusions: Allocentric and egocentric VSN severity were significantly associated with decreased standing independence, but not impaired postural control or greater asymmetric weight-bearing, in the early subacute post-stroke phase. This may involve traditional VSN measures being not sensitive enough to detect fine-grained VSN deficits due to a ceiling effect between 5 and 8 weeks post-stroke, once the individual regains standing ability. Future studies may require more sensitive VSN measurements to detect such deficits. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov. unique identifier NCT05060458.

Keywords

Longitudinal study, Postural Control, Posturography, Standing balance, Stroke, Visuospatial neglect, Clinical Neurology

Citation

Embrechts, E, Schröder, J, Nijboer, T C W, van der Waal, C, Lafosse, C, Truijen, S & Saeys, W 2024, 'Does visuospatial neglect contribute to standing balance within the first 12 weeks post-stroke? A prospective longitudinal cohort study', BMC Neurology, vol. 24, no. 1, 37. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-023-03475-1