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Your search keyword '"Aphasia, Primary Progressive pathology"' showing total 83 results

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83 results on '"Aphasia, Primary Progressive pathology"'

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1. Dysphagia in primary progressive aphasia: Clinical predictors and neuroanatomical basis.

2. Multimodal cross-examination of progressive apraxia of speech by diffusion tensor imaging-based tractography and Tau-PET scans.

3. Utility of visual rating scales in primary progressive aphasia.

4. The neural substrates of transdiagnostic cognitive-linguistic heterogeneity in primary progressive aphasia.

5. A heterozygous splicing variant IVS9-7A > T in intron 9 of the MAPT gene in a patient with right-temporal variant frontotemporal dementia with atypical 4 repeat tauopathy.

6. Microglial activation in the frontal cortex predicts cognitive decline in frontotemporal dementia.

7. Clinical features and biomarkers of semantic variant primary progressive aphasia with MAPT mutation.

8. Right temporal degeneration and socioemotional semantics: semantic behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia.

9. Primary progressive aphasia.

10. Understanding the multidimensional cognitive deficits of logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia.

11. Focal amyloid and asymmetric tau in an imaging-to-autopsy case of clinical primary progressive aphasia with Alzheimer disease neuropathology.

12. miRNA Expression Is Increased in Serum from Patients with Semantic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia.

13. Cortical and subcortical pathological burden and neuronal loss in an autopsy series of FTLD-TDP-type C.

14. Right temporal variant frontotemporal dementia is pathologically heterogeneous: a case-series and a systematic review.

15. Neuroinflammation is highest in areas of disease progression in semantic dementia.

16. Longitudinal decline in spoken word recognition and object knowledge in primary progressive aphasia.

17. Pattern of cortical thinning in logopenic progressive aphasia patients in Thailand.

18. Accumulation of neurofibrillary tangles and activated microglia is associated with lower neuron densities in the aphasic variant of Alzheimer's disease.

19. White Matter Integrity Predicts Electrical Stimulation (tDCS) and Language Therapy Effects in Primary Progressive Aphasia.

20. Impaired phonemic discrimination in logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia.

21. Neuropathologic basis of in vivo cortical atrophy in the aphasic variant of Alzheimer's disease.

22. PSP-FTD Complex: A Possible Variant of PSP.

23. Middle longitudinal fascicle is associated with semantic processing deficits in primary progressive aphasia.

24. Deformation-based shape analysis of the hippocampus in the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia and Alzheimer's disease.

25. How the speed of word finding depends on ventral tract integrity in primary progressive aphasia.

26. The functional neuroanatomy of emotion processing in frontotemporal dementias.

27. Segmentation of medial temporal subregions reveals early right-sided involvement in semantic variant PPA.

28. The atrophy pattern in Alzheimer-related PPA is more widespread than that of the frontotemporal lobar degeneration associated variants.

29. Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy.

30. Validated automatic speech biomarkers in primary progressive aphasia.

31. [ 18 F]THK-5351 PET imaging in early-stage semantic variant primary progressive aphasia: a report of two cases and a literature review.

32. Thalamic atrophy in frontotemporal dementia - Not just a C9orf72 problem.

33. Longitudinal Changes in Semantic Concreteness in Semantic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia (svPPA).

34. Distinct spatiotemporal patterns of neuronal functional connectivity in primary progressive aphasia variants.

35. Emotion detection deficits and changes in personality traits linked to loss of white matter integrity in primary progressive aphasia.

36. Behavioural and neuroanatomical correlates of auditory speech analysis in primary progressive aphasias.

37. Cholinergic depletion and basal forebrain volume in primary progressive aphasia.

38. Healthy brain connectivity predicts atrophy progression in non-fluent variant of primary progressive aphasia.

39. Network-selective vulnerability of the human cerebellum to Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia.

40. The Brain Network of Naming: A Lesson from Primary Progressive Aphasia.

41. Phonological Processing in Primary Progressive Aphasia.

42. Atrophy patterns in early clinical stages across distinct phenotypes of Alzheimer's disease.

43. Variability in blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal in patients with stroke-induced and primary progressive aphasia.

44. The semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia: clinical and neuroimaging evidence in single subjects.

45. Longitudinal gray matter contraction in three variants of primary progressive aphasia: A tenser-based morphometry study.

46. Content-based image retrieval for brain MRI: an image-searching engine and population-based analysis to utilize past clinical data for future diagnosis.

47. Primary progressive aphasia and the evolving neurology of the language network.

48. Frontal white matter tracts sustaining speech production in primary progressive aphasia.

49. Beyond the temporal pole: limbic memory circuit in the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia.

50. Asymmetry and heterogeneity of Alzheimer's and frontotemporal pathology in primary progressive aphasia.

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