Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific

Rehabilitation studies rarely test the specificity of an intervention by using a control group who are matched to the therapy group in terms of baseline impairment, but who do not have the same causative syndrome. In this study we tested the specificity of an eye movement therapy for a common, acqui...

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Main Authors: Woodhead, Z, Ong, Y, Leff, A
Format: Journal article
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2015
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author Woodhead, Z
Ong, Y
Leff, A
author_facet Woodhead, Z
Ong, Y
Leff, A
author_sort Woodhead, Z
collection OXFORD
description Rehabilitation studies rarely test the specificity of an intervention by using a control group who are matched to the therapy group in terms of baseline impairment, but who do not have the same causative syndrome. In this study we tested the specificity of an eye movement therapy for a common, acquired reading disorder called hemianopic alexia, by comparing hemianopic subjects with slow text reading, to age and reading speed matched controls without hemianopia. The study was carried out using an online therapy programme called “Read-Right” that contains validated tests of both visual field and text reading speed, as well as an eye movement therapy: laterally scrolling text. 201 self-selected subjects completed at least five hours of online therapy. After excluding those with reading speeds incompatible with hemianopic alexia and those with bilateral abnormalities on their visual field test, we were left with 105 who were then classified into one of three groups depending on their visual field: 1) right-sided hemianopia (n=47); 2) left-sided hemianopia (n=36); 3) no hemianopia (n=22, control group). All three groups’ baseline text reading speeds were significantly different to age-matched controls but not to each other. A repeated-measures ANOVA showed a significant therapy by group interaction (p = 0.039). Post-hoc, paired t-tests revealed that this was driven by reading speed improvements for both the right and left-sided hemianopic alexic groups but not the controls. This result demonstrates that a clinically validated therapy for hemianopic alexia improves text reading speed in hemianopic patients but not in subjects matched for slow text reading but without hemianopia. This adds weight to the hypothesis that eye movement therapies are syndrome-specific. It also demonstrates an advantage of using web-based vehicles to deliver syndrome-specific therapies that can be accessed by patients worldwide.
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spelling oxford-uuid:26ced1c4-8372-4efa-8644-7c87b0b674652022-03-26T12:03:16ZWeb-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specificJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:26ced1c4-8372-4efa-8644-7c87b0b67465Symplectic Elements at OxfordBMJ Publishing Group2015Woodhead, ZOng, YLeff, ARehabilitation studies rarely test the specificity of an intervention by using a control group who are matched to the therapy group in terms of baseline impairment, but who do not have the same causative syndrome. In this study we tested the specificity of an eye movement therapy for a common, acquired reading disorder called hemianopic alexia, by comparing hemianopic subjects with slow text reading, to age and reading speed matched controls without hemianopia. The study was carried out using an online therapy programme called “Read-Right” that contains validated tests of both visual field and text reading speed, as well as an eye movement therapy: laterally scrolling text. 201 self-selected subjects completed at least five hours of online therapy. After excluding those with reading speeds incompatible with hemianopic alexia and those with bilateral abnormalities on their visual field test, we were left with 105 who were then classified into one of three groups depending on their visual field: 1) right-sided hemianopia (n=47); 2) left-sided hemianopia (n=36); 3) no hemianopia (n=22, control group). All three groups’ baseline text reading speeds were significantly different to age-matched controls but not to each other. A repeated-measures ANOVA showed a significant therapy by group interaction (p = 0.039). Post-hoc, paired t-tests revealed that this was driven by reading speed improvements for both the right and left-sided hemianopic alexic groups but not the controls. This result demonstrates that a clinically validated therapy for hemianopic alexia improves text reading speed in hemianopic patients but not in subjects matched for slow text reading but without hemianopia. This adds weight to the hypothesis that eye movement therapies are syndrome-specific. It also demonstrates an advantage of using web-based vehicles to deliver syndrome-specific therapies that can be accessed by patients worldwide.
spellingShingle Woodhead, Z
Ong, Y
Leff, A
Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific
title Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific
title_full Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific
title_fullStr Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific
title_full_unstemmed Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific
title_short Web-based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome-specific
title_sort web based therapy for hemianopic alexia is syndrome specific
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AT ongy webbasedtherapyforhemianopicalexiaissyndromespecific
AT leffa webbasedtherapyforhemianopicalexiaissyndromespecific