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Outline Health

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Title: Outline Health


1
Outline Health Neuropsychology
  • Neuropsychological Assessment
  • Background on brain function behavior
  • Goals of neuropsychological assessment
  • Psychometric approach advantages
  • Psychometric approach interpretation
  • Neuropsychological Test Batteries
  • Halstead-Reitan

2
Outline Health Neuropsychology
  • IQ and Neuropsychological Testing
  • Malingering
  • Functions of interest to neuropsychologists
  • Laterality
  • Visual Perception
  • Language
  • Memory
  • Attention Executive Control

3
Neuropsychological testing
  • Basic ideas
  • Human mind is most complex system we know of in
    the universe.
  • Human brain is also very complicated.
  • As a result, there are many ways that things can
    go wrong.
  • Many combinations of behavioral and mental
    impairment following an insult to the brain.

4
Goals of neuropsychological assessment
  • Diagnosis
  • What happened? What went wrong as a result?

5
Goals of neuropsychological assessment
  • Diagnosis
  • Description
  • Cognitive and behavioral deficits that result

6
Goals of neuropsychological assessment
  • Diagnosis
  • Description
  • Tracking changes
  • in patients performance over time, to monitor
    healing/worsening and effects of treatment

7
Psychometric assessment - advantages
  • Standardized
  • Repeatable instructions, presentation, and tasks
  • Norms

8
Psychometric assessment - advantages
  • Standardized
  • Intensive
  • Multiple measures within and among wide range of
    domains

9
Psychometric assessment - advantages
  • Standardized
  • Intensive
  • Sensitive
  • Valid indicators of skills, capable of detecting
    abilities and deficits

10
Psychometric assessment advantages
  • Standardized
  • Intensive
  • Sensitive
  • Scaled
  • Hierarchical items start/stop rules

11
Psychometric assessment advantages
  • Standardized
  • Intensive
  • Sensitive
  • Scaled
  • Precise
  • Allows reliable, exacting quantification of
    relative abilities
  • Allows comparison within/over time

12
Psychometric assessment Interpretation
  • Quantitative observations
  • Many tests give standardized scale scores (like
    Wechsler tests) based on norms
  • Actuarial results (e.g., Boston Aphasia Battery)
    profile of subtest scores indicates nature of
    disorder
  • Cut-off scores used to make decisions

13
Psychometric assessment Interpretation
  • Neuropsychologists also make up tests as needed
    these typically are not standardized, so
    interpretation may be problematic.
  • Example line-crossing task used to detect
    neglect following right-hemisphere brain damage

14
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15
Line-crossing task to detect neglect
  • What do we know about this test? What cognitive
    operations are involved in test performance?
  • Why do neglect patients fail at this test?
  • Is this test valid? Reliable?

16
IQ and neuropsychological testing
  • IQ is frequently of interest to clinicians
    testing a BD patient.
  • Often difficult to use a regular IQ test with
    patients e.g., they may not understand
    instructions, or may not be able to move their
    right hand

17
IQ and neuropsychological testing
  • We sometimes try to estimate pre-morbid IQ on the
    basis of education, job, or other evidence
  • Individual IQ subtests are often used to assess
    broader cognitive skills without producing a full
    IQ score

18
Estimating pre-morbid IQ
  • Clinical approaches
  • Educational level
  • Vocabulary skills
  • Occupational background, farm size
  • Functional capacities self-care, finances,
    drivers license, food preparation, parenthood,
    daily activities

19
Estimating pre-morbid IQ
  • Clinical approaches
  • Actuarial psychometric approaches
  • Demographic Formulas
  • Reading level
  • Subtest pattern

20
Neuropsychological test batteries
  • Test batteries are large sets of tests that tap a
    variety of skills and abilities
  • Developed before the era of scanning, in part to
    help locate site of brain damage
  • Wide variety, large number of tests thought
    necessary because human behavior is so complex

21
To use test batteries or not?
  • On the plus side
  • Many batteries have known psychometric properties
    (e.g., reliability, validity).
  • Use of standardized procedure permits comparison
    of one patient with others, even if the others
    are tested by different clinicians.
  • Tests cover a wide range of cognitive functions
    and behaviors

22
To use test batteries or not?
  • On the minus side
  • Test-centered rather than patient-centered
  • Time-consuming
  • Patient may fail a test for many different
    reasons
  • Batteries are developed for general purposes
    may lack flexibility to assess any given
    patients idiosyncratic deficits.
  • May reduce clinicians potentially useful
    curiosity, lead to cookie-cutter reports.

23
Halstead Reitan Neuropsychological Tests
  • Ward Halstead
  • Ph.D. psychologist, taught in U Chicago Medical
    School
  • Through 1940s, devised and tried out many tests
    for use with brain-damaged patients
  • With his student Ralph Reitan, settled on a
    battery of tests that allowed comprehensive
    evaluation of BD patients

24
Reitans four-fold approach
  • Inferential decision-making using the HRNTB based
    on
  • Level of performance
  • Pattern of performance
  • Specific behavioral deficits
  • Comparison of two sides of the body (right-left
    comparisons)

25
Reitans four-fold approach
  • Level of performance
  • Comparison of individual with normative groups of
    impaired and non-impaired persons

26
Reitans four-fold approach
  • Level of performance
  • Pattern of Performance
  • Examination of intra-test performance and subtest
    scores

27
Reitans four-fold approach
  • Level of performance
  • Pattern of Performance
  • Specific Behavioral Deficits (Pathognomonic Signs)
  • Sensitivity to deviant or deficient performance
    which, of itself, points to impairment

28
Reitans four-fold approach
  • Level of performance
  • Pattern of Performance
  • Specific Behavioral Deficits
  • Comparison of Two Sides of the Body
  • Looking for discrepancies in test performance
    which may reveal weakness or lateralized
    impairment

29
Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological Tests
  • Category test
  • Tests abstraction and reasoning
  • Tactual performance test
  • Manual dexterity, spatial memory, tactile
    discrimination
  • Seashore rhythm test Speech-sounds perception
    test
  • Attention, concentration, auditory
    discrimination
  • Finger tapping test
  • Motor speed and manual dexterity

30
Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological Tests
  • Trail making (see below)
  • Reitan-Indiana Aphasia Screening Examination
  • Reitan-Klove Sensory Perceptual Examination
  • Version of standard neurological screening test
    for sensory processes
  • Strength of Grip Test
  • Uses hand dynamometer
  • Lateral Dominance Examination

31
Malingering
  • Faking a disorder or deficit.
  • Important for legal and financial reasons
    people sometimes fake a deficit in order to
    collect insurance payments, or to fraudulently
    obtain narcotics

32
Malingering
  • In general, tests to catch malingering are based
    on the fact that malingerers dont know what real
    deficits look like they often show too much
    loss of function.
  • Munchausen Syndrome psychopathology involves
    faking illness, but not for money or drugs
  • Rarely treated successfully

33
Functions of interest to neuropsychologists
  • Laterality
  • Visual Perception
  • Language
  • Memory
  • Attention Executive Control

34
1. Laterality
  • Compares functions of the L and R hemispheres of
    the cortex
  • Especially important if neurosurgery is planned
    where are language functions?
  • Language functions are in left hemisphere in most
    people, bilateral in some
  • Annett Handedness Questionnaire

35
Annett Handedness Questionnaire
  • Please indicate which hand you habitually use for
    each of the following (R, L or E)
  • 1. Writing
  • 2. Throwing a ball
  • 3. Holding a racquet
  • 4. Striking a match
  • 5. Cut with scissors
  • 6. Threading a needle
  • 7. At top of broom
  • 8. At top of shovel
  • 9. To deal cards
  • 10. To hammer a nail
  • 11. To hold a toothbrush
  • 12. To unscrew a lid
  • There are several ways to score this test

36
2. Visual Perception
  • Visual field deficits informal assessment
    clinician moves fingers into patients field of
    vision from the side. Patient announces when
    he/she can see fingers.
  • Assessed more precisely using special optometry
    equipment.

37
2. Visual Perception
  • Agnosia inability to recognize familiar objects
    visually.
  • Objects can be recognized on basis of sound
    (e.g., lawnmower)
  • Meaning of objects has not been lost its a
    deficit of visual recognition.
  • To test ask patient to name various objects

38
Figure/ground discrimination separate figure
from background
39
The embedded figures test task is to find all
the objects in this figure.
40
The objects in the embedded figures test stimulus
41
Visual agnosias
  • visual object agnosia inability to identify
    common visual objects
  • prosopagnosia inability to recognize familiar
    faces
  • color agnosia inability to discriminate between
    colors and to name colors
  • simultanagnosia visual perception of
    simultaneously presented objects is impaired

42
Visual Memory
  • Rey-Osterrieth figure
  • complicated, abstract figure (next slide)
  • patient looks at it briefly then asked to
    reproduce the figure from memory
  • scoring is quite complex
  • assesses visual memory, visual construction skill

43
The Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure (Osterrieth,
1946)
44
3. Language
  • A very important function for humans, typically
    mediated by left hemisphere
  • Expressive and receptive language can be
    independently lost or spared
  • Batteries include Boston Diagnostic Aphasia
    Examination and Western Aphasia Battery
    (developed at UWO School of Medicine)

45
Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination
  • Oral Expression word repetition, body part
    naming, visual confrontation naming
  • Writing
  • Auditory comprehension Body part identification
  • Understanding written language Word picture
    matching.

46
3. Language
  • Task-specific tests used with patients having
    comparatively isolated dysfunctions
  • Graded Naming Test or Boston Naming Test - both
    assess ability to name objects.
  • Token Test - detects non-obvious loss of
    receptive language
  • Pyramid Palm Trees Test - tests the
    understanding of words

47
Graded Naming Test examples test has 30 of
these, presented in order of increasing difficulty
Boston Naming Test examples
48
Pyramid
Palm Tree
Fir Tree
3 Word Version
3 Picture Version
Pyramid and Palm Trees Test which one of the
two lower items goes with the upper item?
49
4. Memory
  • Amnesia is loss of episodic (personal) memory,
    which may include knowledge of public
    people/events
  • Two distinct kinds of amnesia
  • Retrograde loss of memory for events from
    patients past
  • Old things in memory cannot be retrieved
  • Anterograde loss of ability to store new
    memories.
  • New things cannot be put into memory

50
Retrograde amnesia
  • Boston Remote Memory test
  • 2 types of questions
  • Easy
  • Hard
  • 2 types of material
  • Name famous faces (hints given if needed)
  • Events asked to recall information about them

51
Anterograde amnesia
  • Warringtons Recognition Memory Test
  • 50 faces and 50 words presented separately
  • 2AFC test administered immediately after learning
    phase
  • Mild impairment in young patients not detected
  • Severely impaired patients may perform at chance.
    Then, its hard to tell whats wrong with their
    memory

52
Anterograde amnesia
  • Wechsler Memory Scale III
  • Separate short-term and long-term retention
    scores
  • Tries to differentiate between verbal and
    non-verbal elements of memory
  • Includes recall and recognition tests
  • 2 hours to administer

53
5. Attention Executive Control
  • Spatial attention Line bisection, cancellation
    tasks
  • Sustained attention / vigilance Continuous
    performance test (CPT)
  • Focused attention Dichotic listening / visual
    search
  • Divided attention Trail making, task
    combinations

54
Trails A and Trails B from Halstead-Reitan test
battery
55
5. Attention Executive Control
  • Executive functions
  • Assess higher cortical functions such as
    planning, response inhibition, controlled
    functions (e.g., new task, or new environment).
  • Wisconsin Card Sort Task used frequently

56
Sort by color
Sort by number
Sort according to unspoken rule examiner changes
rule can patient adapt to new rule?
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