Case Report Detail

Right-left confusion in Gerstmann's syndrome: a model of body centered spatial orientation.

Author: Gold

Abstract

Gerstmann's syndrome encompasses the tetrad of finger agnosia, agraphia, acalculia and right-left confusion and is associated with lesions of the dominant angular gyrus. The localizing value of this syndrome has been questioned because multiple mechanisms can account for each of the components of the syndrome. We present the case of a man who developed Gerstmann's syndrome following a focal infarct of the left angular gyrus. The patient's right-left confusion could not be accounted for by either an aphasia or a degraded body schema. A series of experiments that investigated the patient's spatial mapping system by progressively restricting the degrees of freedom for spatial rotation revealed an isolated defect in deriving the relative position of an object along the horizontal axis. Defective horizontal mapping can account for the other components of Gerstmann's syndrome because they all share a common dependency on relative horizontal positioning.

Citation Info

  • DOI: 10.1016/s0010-9452(13)80362-0
  • PubMed ID: 7555006
  • Other Citation: Gold (None). Right-left confusion in Gerstmann's syndrome: a model of body centered spatial orientation.
  • Open Access: No
  • Document: Please log in to access the document.

Associated Symptoms

Symptom Subdomain Domain
mathematical impairment Other Cognitive Systems
agraphia Language Cognitive Systems
size perception Perception Cognitive Systems
visual agnosia Perception Cognitive Systems

Validation Status

Validated by: No users have validated this case report yet.

Rejected by: No users have rejected this case report yet.

Please log in to validate this case report.

Subjects

No subjects have been added to this case report yet.

Please log in to add a subject.

No notes have been submitted for this case report yet.