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Slowly progressive aphemia: a neuropsychological, conventional, and functional MRI study

Authors :
Raffaele Lodi
Raffaele Agati
M. Stanzani Maserati
Luisa Sambati
Daniela Cevolani
Roberto Gallassi
Roberto Poda
Federico Oppi
Gallassi R
Sambati L
Poda R
Oppi F
Stanzani Maserati M
Cevolani D
Agati R
Lodi R.
Source :
Neurological Sciences. 32:1179-1186
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Slowly progressive aphemia (SPA) is a rare focal degenerative disorder characterized by severe dysarthria, frequent orofacial apraxia, dysprosody, phonetic and phonemic errors without global cognitive deterioration for many years. This condition is caused by a degeneration of anterior frontal lobe regions, mainly of the left frontal operculum. We report a case of SPA with a course of 8 years, evaluated by repeated neuropsychological, conventional, and functional MRI examinations. In our case, neuropsychological examinations showed a progressive impairment of speech articulation including dysprosody, phonetic and phonemic errors, and slight writing errors. No global cognitive deterioration was detected and the patient is still completely autonomous. Morphological and functional investigations showed, respectively, a progressive atrophy and progressive impairment of the left frontal region, confirming the role of the opercular region in determining this rare syndrome. During verbal task generation as the cortical activation of this region gradually decreased, the language articulation worsened.

Details

ISSN :
15903478 and 15901874
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurological Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0cd3f386a9912073b4817a194e94c1a6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10072-011-0625-1