Abstract

BackgroundIt is a well-known phenomenon that some patients with acute left or right hemisphere stroke show a deviation of the eyes (Prévost's sign) and head to one side. Here we investigated whether both right- and left-sided brain lesions may cause this deviation. Moreover, we studied the relationship between this phenomenon and spatial neglect. In contrast to previous studies, we determined not only the discrete presence or absence of eye deviation with the naked eye through clinical inspection, but actually measured the extent of horizontal eye-in-head and head-on-trunk deviation. In further contrast, measurements were performed early after stroke onset (1.5 days on average).MethodsEye-in-head and head-on-trunk positions were measured at the bedside in 33 patients with acute unilateral left or right cerebral stroke consecutively admitted to our stroke unit.ResultsEach single patient with spatial neglect and right hemisphere lesion showed a marked deviation of the eyes and the head to the ipsilesional, right side. The average spontaneous gaze position in this group was 46° right, while it was close to the saggital body midline (0°) in the groups with acute left- or right-sided stroke but no spatial neglect as well as in healthy subjects.ConclusionA marked horizontal eye and head deviation observed ~1.5 days post-stroke is not a symptom associated with acute cerebral lesions per se, nor is a general symptom of right hemisphere lesions, but rather is specific for stroke patients with spatial neglect. The evaluation of the patient's horizontal eye and head position thus could serve as a brief and easy way helping to diagnose spatial neglect, in addition to the traditional paper-and-pencil tests.

Highlights

  • It is a well-known phenomenon that some patients with acute left or right hemisphere stroke show a deviation of the eyes (Prévost's sign) and head to one side

  • We found a huge deviation of all three parameters in the group of neglect patients (RBD+) compared to all other groups without spatial neglect (RBD, LBD, NBD)

  • We found this deviation of gaze, eye-in-head, and head-ontrunk position in every single patient with spatial neglect (RBD+) and exclusively (= 100%) towards the ipsilesional, right side

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Summary

Introduction

It is a well-known phenomenon that some patients with acute left or right hemisphere stroke show a deviation of the eyes (Prévost's sign) and head to one side. Its evaluation is part of different clinical stroke scales, including the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [1], the European Stroke Scale [2], or the Scandinavian Stroke Scale [3,4] It seems as if this sign occurs after both rightsided as well as left-sided stroke, steering the eyes towards the respective lesion side. From these studies, five have addressed the relationship between a deviation of the eyes (and of the head) and spatial neglect [6,7,8,9,10]. Like De Renzi et al [6] and Tijssen [7], Kömpf and Gmeiner [8] did not systematically investigate patients withouteye/head deviation for spatial neglect

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