Amobarbital Effects and Lateralized Brain Function von David W. Loring | The Wada Test | ISBN 9780387977386

Amobarbital Effects and Lateralized Brain Function

The Wada Test

von David W. Loring, Kimford J. Meador, Gregory P. Lee und Don W. King
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinDavid W. Loring
Autor / AutorinKimford J. Meador
Autor / AutorinGregory P. Lee
Autor / AutorinDon W. King
Buchcover Amobarbital Effects and Lateralized Brain Function | David W. Loring | EAN 9780387977386 | ISBN 0-387-97738-4 | ISBN 978-0-387-97738-6

Amobarbital Effects and Lateralized Brain Function

The Wada Test

von David W. Loring, Kimford J. Meador, Gregory P. Lee und Don W. King
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinDavid W. Loring
Autor / AutorinKimford J. Meador
Autor / AutorinGregory P. Lee
Autor / AutorinDon W. King
The intracarotid amobarbital (or Amytal) procedure is commonly referred to as the Wada test in tribute to Juhn Wada, the physician who devised the technique and performed the fIrst basic animal research and clinical studies with this method. Wada testing has become an integral part of the pre operative evaluation for epilepsy surgery. Interestingly, however, Wada initially developed this method as a technique to assess language dominance in psychiatric patients in order that electroconvulsant therapy could be applied unilaterally to the non-dominant hemisphere. Epilepsy surgery has matured as a viable treatment for intractable seizures and is no longer confmed to a few major universities and medical institutes. Yet, as is increasingly clear by examining the surveys of approaches used by epilepsy surgery centers (e. g., Rausch, 1987; Snyder, Novelly, & Harris, 1990), there is not only great heterogeneity in the methods used during Wada testing to assess language and memory functions, but there also seems to be a lack of consensus regarding the theoretical assumptions, and perhaps, even the goals of this procedure.