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Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
Lecture
42
METHODS OF
NEUROLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
WHAT IS A
NEUROLOGICAL ASSESSMENT?
Neurological
assessment was traditionally
carried out to assess the
extent of impairment to a particular
skill
and
to attempt to locate an area of
the brain which may
have been damaged after
brain injury or
neurological
illness. With the advent of brain
imaging techniques, location of
brain damage can now
be
accurately
determined so the focus has
now moved onto the
measurement of cognition
and behavior,
including
examining the effects of any
brain injury or neuropsychological
process that a person may
have
experienced.
A core part of neurological assessment is
the administration of neurological
tests for the
formal
assessment of cognitive functioning.
Aspects of cognitive functioning that
are assessed
typically
include
orientation, new-learning/memory,
intelligence, language, visuoperception,
and executive-
control/self-awareness.
However, clinical neurological
assessment is more than this
and encompasses a
focus
also on a person's psychological,
personal, interpersonal and wider
contextual circumstances.
Assessment
may be carried for a variety of
reasons, such as: Clinical
evaluation, to understand the
pattern
of
cognitive
strengths as well as
any difficulties a person may
have, and to aid decision
making for use in a
medical
or rehabilitation environment.
Miller
outlined three broad goals of
neurological assessment.
·
Firstly,
diagnosis, to determine the nature of
the underlying problem.
·
Secondly,
to understand the nature of
any brain injury or
resulting cognitive problem and its
impact
on
the individual,
·
And
lastly, assessments may be undertaken to
measure change in functioning
over time.
DEFINITION:
"Neuropsychology
is the study of brain-behavior
relationships".
Clinical
Neuropsychology combines the
knowledge base developed through
classical, localizationalist
neurology
with the modern methods of
American psychometric
psychology.
The
objectives of neuropsychological assessment in
clinical practice are to
assess and diagnose
disturbances
of
mentation and behavior and to relate
these findings to their
neurological implications and to the
issues of
clinical
treatment and prognosis. (By
Gregory P. Lee, PhD)
The
clinical neuropsychologist offers a variety of
services, including the
assessment of the psychological-
behavioral
effects of real or suspected brain
lesions, the diagnosis of organic
brain conditions, and the
planning
and implementation of rehabilitation
programs for brain injured
patients.
At
a time when clinical psychologists'
interest in traditional psychological
assessment techniques
(Rorschach,
Thematic Apperception Test, Bender
Gestalt, and so on) has
decreased, interest in
clinical
neuropsychological
evaluation procedures has
risen markedly.
Historically,
the field of neuropsychology evolved
from a lesion localization model (e.g.,
trauma to a
particular
part of the brain leads to a
particular kind of deficit)
and from studies of the
effects of
neurological
disease, primarily in adults, on
cognitive functioning. At present,
behaviors are further
defined
and
linked to brain processes
through the use of new
technologies (e.g., neuroimaging or brain
scans). The
neuropsychologist
endeavors to assess different
domains of functioning (e.g., attention,
memory, problem
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solving)
in order to generate a profile of
strengths and weaknesses that
can inform treatment
planning and
adaptation
in daily life.
A
neuropsychological assessment typically
evaluates multiple areas of
functioning. It is not restricted
to
measures
of intelligence (e.g., IQ)
and achievement but examines
other areas of functioning that also
have
an
impact on performance in the classroom,
with peers, at home, or on
the job. The following
represents a
set
of cognitive functions that is likely to be
assessed:
·
Sensory
perceptual and motor
functions
·
Attention
·
Memory
·
Auditory
and visual processing
·
Language
·
Concept
formation and problem
solving
·
Planning
and organization
·
Speed
of Processing
·
Intelligence
·
Academic
skills
·
Behavior,
emotions, and personality
WHAT
INFORMATION DOES NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT PROVIDE?
A
comprehensive assessment can
yield information to assist in
distinguishing one disorder from
another as
well
as better clarifying its nature.
The diagnostic referral question may
also involve discriminating
between
neurological
and psychiatric disorders. In addition,
based on knowledge of brain-behavior
relationships,
evidence
for dysfunction in one
region of the brain may tell
us something about other difficulties that
might
be
present.
In
this regard, knowing more about
the individual's
strengths and weaknesses can
assist in interpreting
their
behaviors
and guiding program/treatment
planning. For example, a parent or
teacher may observe: `It
feels
like
I have to teach Sara
everything, every time.'
Underlying this behavior may be deficits
in identifying the
rules
for more abstract concepts,
identifying or discovering the common
(or "unwritten")
principle,
discriminating
relevant versus irrelevant information,
or memory.
Finally,
a written report should be provided
following completion of the
assessment that can be shared
with
those
involved in the individual's
care. Reasons for referral, Background
information (history and
current
concerns),
Tests administered, Behavioral
observations, Test results
and interpretation, Summary
of
impressions,
Recommendations and need for
referrals to other specialists
APPROACHES
TO NEUROLOGICAL EVALUATION:
Neuropsychologist
make inferences regarding an individual's
neurological functioning based on
measures
of
behavior (neuropsychological test
performance). In the neuropsychological
exam, an attempt is made
to
elicit
the individual's best
performance in order to measure his or
her maximum capability or
potential. This
information
is helpful from the standpoint of
both assessment and
rehabilitation.
Another
very important conceptual
issue in the neuropsychological
examination has to do with
the
premorbid
level of functioning. Inferences
regarding an individual's present
neurological condition
are
based
on an assumed change in neurological
status. To assess the degree
of change, it is necessary to
obtain
an
estimate of premorbid level of
ability against which to
compare the current level of
functioning. Such an
estimate
can be reconstructed from a
variety of sources, including
academic and employment
history,
reports
from the family, and
previous standardized test scores,
where such data are
available.
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Lezak
(1976) discusses 2 methods.
The first is based on the
assumption that certain well
established
abilities,
such as vocabulary skills
and fund of general
information, are frequently
preserved in individuals
with
brain injury, while other
skills are impaired. A
clinician using this method examines
the level of
performance
on tasks like the vocabulary
and information subtests of
the WAIS and compares
this
performance
with other neuropsychological test
scores. However, the
clinician must be careful,
since
certain
localized injuries (mainly of the
left hemisphere) often
produce deficits in language
usage that may
severely
compromise the individual's
verbal skills.
The
second method assumes that
the individual's best current
performance provides the
closest
approximation
to his original ability
level;" hence the clinician
simply looks for the
highest scores or set
of
scores.
Again,
caution is warranted, since some patients
are so severely impaired that all
test scores are
depressed.
Lezak
warns that a single high test
score on a memory task may not be a good
estimate of premorbid level
of
functioning, since memory is the
least reliable indicator of
general intellectual ability of
all intellectual
functions.
There
are several other methodological
approaches that neuropsychologist use in
evaluating and
interpreting
a given patient's performance. No single
approach is itself satisfactory, but when
they are used
in
concert each approach
supplements the
other.
The
more common approaches are
level of performance, pattern analysis,
pathognomonic signs, and
right-
left
differences. Each is described
more fully below.
1. Level Of
Performance:
In
the level of performance
approach, the patient is administered
tests that are sensitive to
cerebral
impairment.
The patient's scores on such
tests are compared to
normative levels that have an
established
degree
of accuracy in differentiating
brain-damaged from non-brain
damaged persons. Thus if a
given
patient
scores higher than the
cutoff score on this test, this
performance is considered typical of
organically
impaired
individuals and there is
some probability that he does
have brain dysfunction. This
approach,
when
used alone, has many problems
associated with it. Some
non-brain damaged patient's
score in the
brain
damaged range for reasons
having nothing to do with
the intactness of their
cerebral cortices.
In
the past, many psychologists
used the Bender
Gestalt as a single
measure of organicity. This is
an
inappropriate
use of this test; although
the Bender may be of help in the
diagnosis. It is by no means
sufficient,
because it provides just one bit of
data about the patient.
Another
problem with the level of
performance approach particularly when a
single test is used is that a
patient
may do well on this test despite
having significant deficits in other
areas of higher
cortical
functioning.
For example, right handed patient
with lesions in the left
temporal lobe may perform well on
a
measure
of visual constructive abilities such as
the Bender Gestalt, but do
very poorly on measures
of
language
functioning. Brain damage is
not a unitary concept: its
effects may vary widely and
can be
pervasive
or highly circumscribed.
2.
Pattern Analysis:
Pattern
analysis means that the patient is
given a battery of tests with
known association to higher
cortical
functioning;
and the neuropsychologist then looks at
the pattern of test
performance--on which tests
did the
patient
perform relatively poorly,
and on which tests did
the patient perform well?
The classic example of
the
pattern approach is examination of verbal
performance discrepancies on the
WAIS. In pattern analysis,
the
examiner looks for common
areas of deficit, noting
those areas in which test
performance tends to be
lower
in brain-damaged individuals with
specific brain lesions. The
problem with pattern analysis
approach
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is
that a person could have a
low score on a given test
for numerous reasons, and
the simple presence of
the
low
score does not necessarily
mean a localized problem.
3.
Pathognomonic Signs:
A
pathognomonic sign is a problem that a patient
manifests that is an absolute indication
of organic brain
disorder.
A pathognomonic sign is present the
patient is, by definition,
suffering from an organic
neurological
disorder. Examples of pathognomonic signs
are visual field deficits, spatial
inattention or
neglect,
aprexia and alexia. There
are also a large number of
signs that are not pathognomonic,
but whose
presence
strongly implies an organic problem.
These specific behavioral deficits
include profound
difficulty
in
perceiving numbers written on
the tops of the patient's
fingers, difficulty in naming certain fingers
that
are
touched while the patient is
blind folded, and consistent
deficits in the perception of stimuli
under
condition
of bilateral simultaneous
stimulation.
The
major advantage of the pathognomonic sign
approach is that if the sign is present,
the patient
definitely
has
organic impairment. The major disadvantage,
however, is that absolute pathognomonic
signs are seen
rather
infrequently on neuropsychological
evaluation.
4.
Right-Left
Differences:
To
use the right-left difference
approach, the clinician
examines the test scores of
patient on the tasks that
require
performance or participation of both
sides of the body. A number
of tests on the Halstead
Battery
involve
having the patient perform a
given task with his or
her dominant hand and then
perform the same
task
with the non-dominant hand.
For example, to give another
example on the Tactual
Performance Test, a
right
handed patient who takes a
significantly longer time
for block placement with
the left hand than
for
the
right might suggest a lesion in
the parietal area of the
right hemisphere. One
problem with this
approach
is
that measuring right-left differences
typically means measuring motor
and sensory-motor deficit, so
the
number
of tests in this category is
limited.
The
level of performance, pattern
analysis, right-left differences, and
pathognomonic sign approaches to
neuropsychological
evaluation are the methods
most frequently used in
clinical practice. Several
other
approaches
have been developed but are
not in wide spread use.
Brief description of 2 of these
approaches
follow.
USES
OF CLINICAL NEURO-PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT:
1.
Diagnostic Clarification:
In
confusing or complex cases, neuropsychological
assessment can be useful for
teasing out the
relative
contributions
of neurological conditions (e.g.,
cellular degeneration, neurochemical
disruption), emotional
states
(e.g., anxiety, depression),
and psychiatric illnesses (e.g.,
personality disorder, psychoses).
Neuro-
psychological
assessment can be used to
help localize brain
damage.
2.
Measuring Change:
Repeat
assessment can be valuable in charting
progress (e.g., recovery from
cerebrovascular accident or
closed
head injury) as well as for
recognizing a decline in mental status (e.g.,
following the course
of
various
dementias, identifying unexpected
declines in patients undergoing various
treatments or during
the
process
of recovery).
3.
Evaluating Cognitive And Functional
Status:
Neuropsychological
testing is able to delineate an individual's pattern of
cognitive strengths and
weaknesses
relative
to his or her own ability as
well as compared to normative
samples of age-matched peers
(Ideally,
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norms
should be matched for age,
education, gender, and race if
each variable has been
shown to affect test
performance).
APPLICATIONS
OF NEURO-PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT:
1.
Vocational Interventions:
With
the input of the neuropsychologist, a
patient's ability to rejoin
the work force can be evaluated
and
efforts
toward re-entry can be facilitated
(e.g., develop specific routines that are
tailored to the
patient's
existing
strengths and that anticipate the impact
of his or her limitations).
Aspects of neuropsychological
testing
can be integrated with organizational
psychology in order to enhance the
quality of vocational
assessment.
2.
Academic
Interventions:
As
with vocational interventions, results of
a neuropsychological assessment may be
used to plan a
special
educational
program to better meet the
needs of an individual. This
may be useful with developmental
disorders
as well as with patients recovering
from illness or injury.
3.
Family Interventions:
Accurate
knowledge about a patient's functional
status may assist him or her
to adjust their role within
a
family
system. Neuropsychological information
may enable family members to
recognize the need
for
changes
and accommodations within
their relationships, highlight the
need for environmental
changes to
accommodate
patient deficits, and provide an
opportunity for emotional
processing and eventual
acceptance
of
the patient's
limitations.
4.
Competency Issues:
Neuropsychological
status plays an important role in
determining a patient's overall
competency. Questions
typically
involve one's ability to
exercise rational judgment, make
competent decisions, and
live in an
independent
fashion. In addition to cognitive status,
assessment of the patient's
awareness of their
limitations
is also important in establishing ability
for independent functioning.
METHODS
OF NEURO-PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT:
1.
Medical History:-All relevant
medical records, especially results of
neurological examination,
imaging
studies,
and electrophysiological (EEG)
results.
2.
Clinical
Interview:-Includes
review of cognitive, sensorimotor,
and neurovegetative complaints as
well
as
medical, psychiatric, and substance abuse
history. Family members may
be interviewed when necessary.
3.
Behavioral Observations:-Qualitative
assessment of mentation, motor function,
speech, motivation
for
optimal
test performance, emotion, manner of
relating, and humor.
4.
Psychometric Tests:-These
may be "paper and pencil"
tasks or measures requiring
performance of a
relevant
skill (e.g., assembly of blocks or
puzzles, reaction time tasks).
Major cognitive domains
typically
assessed
include: Attention, Memory,
Intelligence, Visual-Spatial-Perceptual functions,
Psychosensory and
Motor
abilities, "Executive" or "Frontal
Lobe" functions, and Personality or
Emotional Functioning.
INTERPRETATION
OF RESULTS:
Deficit
patterns occurring across neuropsychological
tests can be suggestive of various
sites of cerebral
dysfunction
and neurological processes
underlying the deficit pattern. An
effort is made by the
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neuropsychologist
to integrate test data, history,
clinical interview, behavioral
observations, and
available
laboratory
and radiological evidence
into one cohesive summary
report that arrives at a neurobehavioral
diagnosis,
discusses the neurological
implications (e.g., localization,
course, prognosis), and can
be used in
the
process of treatment
planning.
There
are a number of ways in
which neuropsychologists interpret
test data. First, a patient's
level
of
performance
may
be interpreted in the context of normative
data. For example, does a
patient's score fall
significantly
below the mean score
for the appropriate reference
group, suggesting some
impairment in this
area
of functioning?
Second,
some calculate difference
scores between two tests
for a patient; certain level of
difference suggests
impairment.
Third,
Pathognomonic
analysis of
scores on tests has been
reliably associated with specific
neurological
injuries
or impairments.
Finally,
a number of statistical formulas that weight
test scores differently may
be available for certain
diagnostic
decisions.
A
final point with the
interpretation has to do with
the desirability of making
qualitative evaluations of
patient's
responses. Many neuropsychologists
probably combine the two
approaches which need not to
be
mutually
exclusive.
NEURO-DIAGNOSTIC
PROCEDURES
The
medical field has a variety of
neurodiagnostic procedures. they include
the tradition
neurological
examination
performed by the neurologist, spinal taps, X
rays, electroencephalograms
(EEGs),
computerized
axial tomography (CAT) scans, positron
emission tomography (PET) scans,
and the more
recent
nuclear magnetic resonance
imaging (NMR or MRI) technique.
These are indeed valuable
means for
locating
the presence of damage and
disease. But not all of
these procedures work
equally well in
diagnosing
impairment.
Finally,
some of these procedures
pose risks for the patient.
Spinal taps can be painful
and sometime
harmful;
we all know about the
dangers of too many x rays. In
addition to these standard
forms of
procedures,
several other imaging methods
are available that provide a
better sense of "working"
brain.
(Lowry,
1997).
Single
photon emission computed tomography
(SPECT) imaging is based on
cerebral blood flow and
this
provides
a "picture" of how the brain
is working. As another example,
functional MR imaging (MRI)
also
assesses
blood flow changes in the
brain. Both of these newer
alternative neurodiagnostic procedures
hold
some
promise in clinical neuropsychology
because perhaps they are
more likely to provide
information on
how
different areas of the brain
are working.
Many
of these neurodiagnostic procedures are
quite expensive, and some
are invasive. Therefore, it may be
helpful
to use neuropsychological tests as
screening measures, the
results of which may indicate
whether
more
expensive neurodiagnostic tests are
indicated.
TESTING
AREAS OF COGNITIVE
FUNCTIONING:
A. Intellectual
Functioning:
A
number of techniques have
been used over to assess
levels of intellectual functioning. To
estimate level
of
intellectual ability, many
neuropsychologists use the
WAIS -3 and subtests from a
modified version of
the
WAIS-R called the WAIS-R-NI
(Kaplan, 1991). The modifications
include, for example, changes
in
administration
(such as allowing the
patient to continue on a subtest despite
consecutive incorrect answers)
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and
additional subtest items.
Because of these modifications, it is
believed that the WAIS-R-NI
provides
more
information regarding the patient's
cognitive strategies (R.M. Anderson,
1994).
It
is not possible to administer the entire
WAIS-3, certain individual
subtests may be used--most
commonly,
the
Information subtest, Comprehensive
subtest, and Vocabulary
subtest. These subtests are
believed to be
least
affected by the brain trauma or
injury and thus it also
provides estimates of premorbid
intelligence.
This
is important because often no
preinjury test data are
available to serve as a baseline
against which to
compare
present functioning.
B.
Abstract Reasoning:
For
many years, clinicians observed that
patients diagnosed with
schizophrenia or those deemed
cognitively
impaired
seemed to find it difficult to
think in an abstract or conceptual
fashion. Such patients seemed
to
approach
tasks in a highly concrete
manner. Some of the more
commonly used tests to
assess abstract
reasoning
abilities include the
Similarities subtest of the
WAIS-3 and the Wisconsin
Card Sorting Test, or
WCST
(Heaton, 1981). The Similarities subtest
requires the patient to produce a
description of how 2
objects
are alike. The WCST consists
of decks of cards that differ
according to the shapes
imprinted, the
colors
of the shapes, and the
number of shapes on each
card. The patient is asked to
place each card under
the
appropriate stimulus card according to a
principle (same color, same
shapes, same number of
shapes)
deduced
from the examiner's feedback
('that's right' and 'that's
wrong'). At various points during the
test, the
examiner
changes principles; this can
only be detected from the
examiner's feedback regarding
the
correctness
of the scoring of the next
card.
C.
Memory:
Brain
injury is often marked by memory
loss. To test for such
loss, Wechsler (1945) developed
the
Wechsler
Memory Scale, or WMS. The
Wechsler Memory Scale-3 is
the most recent revision of
the WMS.
The
WMS-3 was developed in conjunction
with the WAIS-3 (Wechsler,
1997), because clinicians
often
measure
intellectual ability and memory
concurrently. WMS-3 subtest
scores are combined into 8
primary
indexes
that assess a range of memory
functioning: Auditory Immediate, Visual
Immediate, Immediate
Memory,
Auditory Delayed, Visual Delayed,
Auditory Recognition Delayed, General
Memory and
Working
Memory. Four supplementary
Auditory Process Composites
can also be calculated.
These are
used
to assess memory processes when stimuli
are presented
auditorily.
D.
Visual-Perceptual Processing:
Visual-spatial
skills are necessary for a
broad range of activities,
including reading a map, parallel
parking a
car,
a throwing a baseball from
the outfield to a base. In
addition to the Rey-Osterrieth Complex
Figure
Test,
many neuropsychologists seeking to assess
visual-spatial skills examine performance on
certain
WAIS-3
subtests, such as the Block
Design subtest. Several specialized
tests of these skills are
also
available.
For example, the judgment of Line
Orientation Test requires
examinees to indicate the
pair of
lines
on a response card that 'match'
the 2 lines on the stimulus
card.
E.
Language Functioning:
Various
forms of brain injury or
trauma can affect either the
production or comprehension of
language.
Tests
that require patients to repeat words,
phrases, and sentences can
assess articulation difficulties
and
paraphasias
(word substitutions); naming tests can
help diagnose anomias
(impaired naming). Language
comprehension
can be assessed using the
Receptive Speech Scale of
the Luria-Nebraska. This
subtest
requires
patients to respond to verbal
commands. Speech and
language pathologists do an excellent job
of
comprehensively
assessing language dysfunction,
and the neuropsychologist may choose to
refer patients to
these
health professionals if a screening test
indicates suspected problems in
language production or
comprehension.
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CONCLUSION:
The
neuropsychological assessment is a method of
examining the brain by
studying its behavioral product.
As
with other psychological assessments,
neuropsychological evaluations include the
comprehensive study
of
behavior by means of standardized
tests that are sensitive to
brain-behavior relationships. In effect,
the
neuropsychological
assessment offers an understanding of the
relationship between the
structure and
function
of the nervous
system.
Thus
the goal of the clinical
neuropsychological assessment is to be able to evaluate
the full range of
basic
abilities
represented in the
brain.
In
practice, the neuropsychological
assessment is multidimensional (concerned
with evaluating
different
parts
aspects of neurofuntioning from
basic to complex), reliable and
valid.
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