Cases reported "Apraxias"

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1/57. Electromagnetic articulography treatment for an adult with Broca's aphasia and apraxia of speech.

    Electromagnetic articulography (EMA) was explored as a means of remediating [s]/[symbol in text] articulation deficits in the speech of an adult with Broca's aphasia and apraxia of speech. Over a 1-month period, the subject was provided with 2 different treatments in a counterbalanced procedure: (1) visually guided biofeedback concerning tongue-tip position and (2) a foil treatment in which a computer program delivered voicing-contrast stimuli for simple repetition. Kinematic and perceptual data suggest improvement resulting from visually guided biofeedback, both for nonspeech oral and, to a lesser extent, speech motor tasks. In contrast, the phonetic contrast treated in the foil condition showed only marginal improvement during the therapy session, with performance dropping back to baseline 10 weeks post-treatment. Although preliminary, the findings suggest that visual biofeedback concerning tongue-tip position can be used to treat nonspeech oral and (to a lesser extent) speech motor behavior in adults with Broca's aphasia and apraxia of speech.
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keywords = aphasia
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2/57. Persistent preceding focal neurologic deficits in children with chronic Epstein-Barr virus encephalitis.

    Epstein-Barr virus encephalitis is a self-limiting disease with few sequelae. Persistence of neurologic deficits prior to and after the acute illness has yet to be described in children. We describe five children with persistent cognitive and focal neurologic deficits due to chronic Epstein-Barr virus encephalitis with various T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities. Clinical features were a 9-year-old boy with aphasia and apraxia, an 11-year-old girl with impulsivity and inappropriate behavior, a 17-year-old boy with deterioration of cognitive skills and judgment, a 5-year-old boy with complex-partial seizures, and a 6-year-old girl with obsessive-compulsive behavior. All patients had elevated serum Epstein-Barr virus titers for acute infection, with cerebrospinal fluid polymerase chain reaction positive for Epstein-Barr virus in four patients. Three children were treated with methylprednisolone with minimal improvement without changes on magnetic resonance imaging. Epstein-Barr virus encephalitis can present with chronic and insidious neurologic symptoms and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of children with acute or chronic neurologic illness of unknown etiology.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = aphasia
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3/57. Phonological agraphia following a focal anterior insulo-opercular infarction.

    Following a unique infarction, restricted to the left anterior insula and the adjacent part of the intrasylvian frontal opercular cortex, an 83-year-old right-handed patient acutely developed a severe speech disorder that evolved into mere mutism within a few hours. After rapid recovery from mutism, oral language was characterized by severe apraxia of speech. In-depth language investigations further disclosed an isolated, highly selective disturbance of the spelling system (phonological agraphia) which resolved rapidly. One year after onset of neurological symptoms, the apraxia of speech had almost completely receded. The anatomoclinical findings in this first representative of pure and nearly isolated phonological agraphia complement previous neuroanatomical and neurolinguistic accounts of phonological agraphia. The data not only seem to enrich current insights in the anatomical locus for phonological agraphia, they also seem to contribute to a further delineation of the insular role in phonologically mediated aphasic manifestations.
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ranking = 0.098538976966071
keywords = mutism
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4/57. Transient crossed aphasia and persistent amnesia after right thalamic haemorrhage.

    A 45-year-old right-handed woman suffered transient aphasia and persistent amnesia after a right thalamic haemorrhage. This patient appeared to have crossed aphasia, although it disappeared within 8 weeks. It is noteworthy that the patient had a unilateral right thalamic lesion but exhibited both verbal and non-verbal memory impairment. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed cerebral haemorrhage in the right thalamus involving the ventral anterior nucleus, medioventral nucleus, mamillothalamic tract, internal medullary lamina, and mediodorsal nucleus. An amytal test was performed and suggested that the right hemisphere was dominant for language functions and the left hemisphere was dominant for visuospatial functions. Single photon emission CT revealed a low perfusion area only in the right thalamus. These findings suggest that the right hemisphere might be dominant for both verbal and non-verbal memory function in this patient, although visuospatial function was lateralized in the left hemisphere.
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keywords = aphasia
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5/57. Distribution of cerebral cortical lesions in Pick's disease with Pick bodies: a clinicopathological study of six autopsy cases showing unusual clinical presentations.

    We investigated six Japanese autopsy cases of Pick's disease with Pick bodies (PDPB) both clinically and pathologically, and examined the distribution of their cerebral cortical lesions using hemisphere and/or bisphere specimens. The lesions were classified into three categories (slight, moderate, and severe). Two patients with a clinical diagnosis of primary progressive apraxia and of slowly progressive aphasia had speech apraxia as their initial signs, and the other two patients were suspected as having Alzheimer's disease, with the clinical diagnosis of the remainder two patients being presenile dementia and depression, respectively. Extrapyramidal signs, believed to be rare in PDPB, were present in four patients. Severe lesions were multicentrically present in the cerebral cortices of all six cases. In two patients with speech apraxia, severe lesions were seen in the primary motor area, which generally has not been regarded as an "atrophic center" in Pick's disease. Furthermore, in a patient with depression, severe lesions were more widespread in the convexity than in the orbital region of the frontal lobe. The parietal lobes, including the postcentral gyrus usually believed to be spared in Pick's disease, were severely involved in three patients. We postulate that the clinical features of PDPB have a much wider spectrum than previously believed. In addition, we believe that the distribution of the cerebral cortical lesions in PDPB is more widespread than previously assumed, and that clinical manifestations of PDPB depend to some extent on the topographic distribution of the cerebral cortical lesions.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = aphasia
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6/57. Dystypia: isolated typing impairment without aphasia, apraxia or visuospatial impairment.

    We report a 60-year-old right-handed Japanese man who showed an isolated persistent typing impairment without aphasia, agraphia, apraxia or any other neuropsychological deficit. We coined the term 'dystypia' for this peculiar neuropsychological manifestation. The symptom was caused by an infarction in the left frontal lobe involving the foot of the second frontal convolution and the frontal operculum. The patient's typing impairment was not attributable to a disturbance of the linguistic process, since he had no aphasia or agraphia. The impairment was not attributable to the impairment of the motor execution process either, since he had no apraxia. Thus, his typing impairment was deduced to be based on a disturbance of the intermediate process where the linguistic phonological information is converted into the corresponding performance. We hypothesized that there is a specific process for typing which branches from the motor programming process presented in neurolinguistic models. The foot of the left second frontal convolution and the operculum may play an important role in the manifestation of 'dystypia'.
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ranking = 1
keywords = aphasia
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7/57. rehabilitation outcome in a patient awakened from prolonged coma.

    BACKGROUND: This article describes the rehabilitation of a patient recovering from a prolonged coma (defined as lasting longer than 4 weeks). The case is noteworthy because it exemplifies the possibilities and difficulties entailed in treating these patients, who are often regarded as too severely impaired to justify intensive rehabilitation efforts. CASE REPORT: The patient is a 28-year old Polish male, unmarried, who suffered serious closed head injuries in an automobile accident in April of 1999. He was in a comatose state for more than two months, with a GCS score of 5. When admitted for rehabilitation he was bedridden, with global aphasia, agraphia, limb apraxia, and executive dysfunction. The rehabilitation program developed for him is described in detail. RESULTS: Over the course of rehabilitation, which began in December 1999 and continues to this writing, the patient has regained locomotion capabilities (though with impairments), and his speech has improved considerably. The apraxia has largely resolved, and he is able to write his name and copy words. He is now capable of performing many activities of daily living. CONCLUSIONS: A comprehensive program of rehabilitation characterized by a strategic, heuristic approach is capable of achieving a good outcome even in very difficult cases, such as prolonged coma.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = aphasia
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8/57. Apraxia of tool use: an autopsy case of biparietal infarction.

    Although disorders in the use of single objects have been reported, there have been few detailed analyses. We describe the autopsy case of a 65-year-old, right-handed male patient with severe impairment of actual tool use which was caused by biparietal infarctions. He persistently and stably showed a severely defective use of actual objects, single or multiple, and relatively well-preserved pantomimes of object use and intransitive gestures. He did not have aphasia or dementia, and his ability for tool naming and function description was completely preserved. The author identified similar patterns of errors about a tool-action(-target) relationship both in single-object use and multiple-object use. Lesion analysis showed cortical infarcts mainly located in the bilateral inferior parietal lobules, extending into the temporal lobe on the right side.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = aphasia
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9/57. Transient cerebellar eye closure and mutism after cerebellar tumor surgery: long-term clinical follow-up of neurologic and behavioral disturbances in a 14-year-old girl.

    Transient cerebellar eye closure (TCES) is a complication of cerebellar tumor surgery in children and is almost exclusively observed in the context of the syndrome of mutism and subsequent dysarthria. As knowledge about the course of transient cerebellar eye closure is absent, we describe in detail the clinical picture in a 14-year-old girl. The process of improvement of TCES is characterized by four distinct phases, can last more than 1 month and may be associated with severe persistent cerebellar dysfunction.
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ranking = 0.24634744241518
keywords = mutism
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10/57. Right orbitofrontal tumor with pedophilia symptom and constructional apraxia sign.

    BACKGROUND: Orbitofrontal abnormalities are associated with poor impulse control, altered sexual behavior, and sociopathy. OBJECTIVE: To describe a patient with acquired pedophilia and a right orbitofrontal tumor who was unable to inhibit sexual urges despite preserved moral knowledge. DESIGN: Case report. RESULTS: The patient displayed impulsive sexual behavior with pedophilia, marked constructional apraxia, and agraphia. The behavioral symptoms and constructional deficits, including agraphia, resolved following tumor resection. CONCLUSIONS: For patients with acquired sociopathy and paraphilia, an orbitofrontal localization requires consideration. This case further illustrates that constructional apraxia can arise from right prefrontal lobe dysfunction. agraphia may represent a manifestation of constructional apraxia in the absence of aphasia and ideomotor apraxia.
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ranking = 0.16666666666667
keywords = aphasia
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