Reduced Visuospatial Attention in Personal Space is Not Limited to the Affected Limb in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

dc.contributor.author Halicka, Monika
dc.contributor.author Brink, Antonia F.Ten
dc.contributor.author Bultitude, Janet H.
dc.contributor.author Cousins, Olivia Rose
dc.contributor.author Vittersø, Axel D.
dc.contributor.author Proulx, Michael J.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-06-18T12:11:34Z
dc.date.available 2025-06-18T12:11:34Z
dc.date.issued 2024-04-01
dc.description.abstract Alterations in spatial attention have been reported in people with chronic pain and may be relevant to understanding its cortical mechanisms and developing novel treatments. There is conflicting evidence as to whether people with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) have reduced visuospatial attention to their affected limb and/or its surrounding space, with some evidence that these deficits may be greater in personal (bodily) space. We aimed to test the competing hypotheses of whether the visuospatial attentional bias is specific to the personal space of the affected limb or generalizes to the personal space of other parts of the affected side of the body.Using visual Temporal Order Judgement tasks, we measured spatial attention in the personal space of the hands and feet of patients with upper (n=14) or lower (n=14) limb CRPS and pain-free controls (n=17). Participants judged the order of two light flashes presented at different temporal offsets on each of their hands or feet. Slower processing of the flash on one side relative to the other reflects reduced attention to that side of space.Controls prioritized stimuli on the non-dominant (left) relative to dominant side, consistent with the well-documented normal leftward bias of attention (ie "pseudoneglect"). Regardless of the location (upper or lower limb) of the pain or visual stimuli, people with CRPS showed no such asymmetry, representing reduced attention to the affected side (compared to the greater attention of controls to their non-dominant side). More severe CRPS symptoms were associated with a greater tendency to deprioritize stimuli on the affected side.Our findings suggest that relative visuospatial bias in CRPS is generalized to the personal space of the affected side of the body, rather than being specific to the personal space of the CRPS-affected limb.
dc.description.epage 1529
dc.description.spage 1519
dc.description.volume Volume 17
dc.identifier.doi 10.2147/jpr.s437366
dc.identifier.issn 1178-7090
dc.identifier.openaire doi_dedup___:b83c54c0ab3010071778965e0fecc500
dc.identifier.pmc PMC11056436
dc.identifier.pmid 38686102
dc.identifier.uri https://ror.circle-u.eu/handle/123456789/1058247
dc.openaire.affiliation UCLouvain
dc.openaire.collaboration 1
dc.publisher Informa UK Limited
dc.rights OPEN
dc.rights.license CC BY
dc.source Journal of Pain Research
dc.subject Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
dc.subject personal space
dc.subject spatial attention
dc.subject Journal Article
dc.subject complex regional pain syndrome
dc.subject chronic pain
dc.subject temporal order judgement
dc.subject pseudoneglect
dc.subject Original Research
dc.subject.fos 03 medical and health sciences
dc.subject.fos 0302 clinical medicine
dc.title Reduced Visuospatial Attention in Personal Space is Not Limited to the Affected Limb in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
dc.type publication

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