Inattention

Sensory ignorance, also known as hemi-inattention, can be somatosensory, visual, or auditory. At this time, the patient cannot be directed to the stimulus from the diseased side and cannot respond or report. Patients' health search lesions neither damage the sensory afferent pathway nor damage the primary sensory cortex or thalamic sensory nucleus. Sensory neglect usually manifests in the form of sensory extension. With the same stimulus, the patient cannot feel the stimulus on one side. But when left and right sides are stimulated separately, patients can feel it.

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