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Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative diseases related to focal degenerations of the brain and mainly manifested by a gradual loss of speech functions.
V. A. Mikhailov +4 more
doaj +5 more sources
Hesitations in Primary Progressive Aphasia
Hesitations are often used by speakers in spontaneous speech not only to organise and prepare their speech but also to address any obstacles that may arise during delivery.
Lorraine Baqué, María Jesús Machuca
doaj +2 more sources
Crossed aphasia in a left-handed patient with non-fluent variant of primary progressive aphasia with left asymmetric brain SPECT [PDF]
Primary progressive aphasia is a clinical syndrome caused by neurodegeneration of areas and neural networks involved in language, usually in the left hemisphere.
Paulo Roberto de Brito-Marques +1 more
doaj +3 more sources
Advances in Primary Progressive Aphasia [PDF]
Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a neurodegenerative syndrome characterized by progressive and predominant language impairment [...]
Jordi A. Matias-Guiu +3 more
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PRIMARY PROGRESSIVE APHASIA [PDF]
Recently, clinical speech and language pathologists are facing a new challenge, diagnosing and suggesting intervention strategies for patients with progressive aphasia. This clinical syndrome differs in many aspects from classical vascular aphasia.
Zsolt Cséfalvay, Robert Rusina
doaj +2 more sources
A decade with anomic primary progressive aphasia
Some patients with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) demonstrate only anomia. The lack of longitudinal observations of anomic PPA precluded us from determining whether progressive anomic aphasia was simply an early stage of semantic or logopenic variants,
Shoko Ota +8 more
doaj +2 more sources
Language breakdown in primary progressive aphasias
Dementias with predominant language involvement, called primary progressive aphasias provide us with unique insight into systematic breakdown of language in neurodegenerative diseases and the structures and networks involved.
Amitabha Ghosh
doaj +3 more sources
Automated Lexical Dysfluency Analysis to Differentiate Primary Progressive Aphasia Variants [PDF]
Vonk J +11 more
europepmc +3 more sources
Neurodegenerative dementia may, in rare cases, initially manifest as isolated language impairments in the absence of other cognitive symptoms. These impairments are often somewhat imprecisely referred to as difficulties with 'word finding'. There are several variants of this form of dementia, each caused by different underlying neuropathologies ...
Torgeir Bruun Wyller +5 more
openaire +2 more sources
MULTI-OBJECT DATA INTEGRATION IN THE STUDY OF PRIMARY PROGRESSIVE APHASIA. [PDF]
Gutierrez R +5 more
europepmc +3 more sources

