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  Vol. 51 No. 5, May 1994 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Anosognosia and Visuoverbal Confabulation

Todd E. Feinberg, MD; David M. Roane, MD; Peter C. Kwan, MD; Rachel J. Schindler, MD; Laurence D. Haber, MD

Arch Neurol. 1994;51(5):468-473.


Abstract

Objective
To examine the relationship between verbal confabulation and anosognosia for hemiplegia (AHP).

Design
We compared patients with right hemisphere lesions and AHP with a control group with right hemisphere lesions without anosognosia. Patients attempted visual identifications of objects exposed to the left hemifield with brief (condition 1) or prolonged (condition 2) presentations. Responses were recorded as correct, incorrect, or admission of failure to perceive.

Setting
Inpatients at Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY.

Patients
A consecutive sample of nine patients with right hemisphere infarcts who demonstrated left hemiparesis, extrapersonal neglect, and left-sided visual field defects.

Main Outcome Measures
Rates of correct, incorrect, and admission of failure to perceive responses.

Results
Patients with AHP had higher error rates (confabulations) and lower admission of failure to perceive rates than nonanosognosic patients in condition 1. Patients with AHP continued to have higher error rates in condition 2. Nonanosognosic patients had higher correct rates in condition 2 than condition 1. Groups did not differ in degree of neglect, lesion size or location, atrophy, sensory loss, or disorientation.

Conclusion
Verbal confabulation is an important determinant in anosognosia.



Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Neurology (Drs Feinberg, Kwan, Schindler, and Haber) and Psychiatry (Drs Feinberg and Roane), Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY.



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