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Aphasia in left-handers *1Comparison of aphasia profiles and language recovery in non-right-handed and matched right-handed patients

Authors :
M P Grassi
Anna Basso
Maria Ester Zanobio
Marcella Laiacona
M Farabola
Source :
Brain and Language. 38:233-252
Publication Year :
1990
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1990.

Abstract

The present retrospective analysis reports two studies. In Study 1, clinical aspects of aphasia are compared in right-handed (RH) and non-right-handed (NRH) patients; in Study 2, recovery from aphasia is compared in RH and NRH aphasic patients with a minimum of 5 months of daily language rehabilitation. From a continuous series of 1200 brain-damaged subjects, 24 NRH patients with a vascular lesion documented by computerized tomography were selected. In 19 cases the lesion was in the left hemisphere and in 5 cases in the right hemisphere. For 14 NRH patients, a RH subject with similar lesion, matched for age, education, length of illness, etiology (ischemic vs. hemorrhagic), and, when possible, sex was found. Presence and type of aphasia were compared in the two patients of the same pair and were found similar except for Pair 14; the RH subject had global aphasia and the NRH had conduction-like aphasia. Fifteen NRH patients were rehabilitated and reexamined at least 5 months after the first examination. Recovery of the 12 patients with a left-hemisphere lesion was compared with recovery of a group of RH subjects and no significant differences were found. Recovery of the three patients with right-hemisphere lesions is described. It is concluded that differences in type of aphasia and recovery between RHs and NRHs have been overemphasized in the past and must be reconsidered.

Details

ISSN :
0093934X
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain and Language
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........297dd2c3ab58a3d0957279579af3fbb9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0093-934x(90)90113-u