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Spatial Agraphia

Brain and Cognition, 1993
Twenty-one patients with right hemisphere damage were studied (11 men, 10 women; average age = 41.33; age range 19-65). Subjects were divided into two groups: pre-Rolandic (6) and retro-Rolandic (15) right hemisphere damaged patients. A special writing test was given to each patient.
A, Ardila, M, Rosselli
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Agraphia

1996
Abstract Agraphia may be defined simply as a loss or impairment of the ability to produce written language caused by brain damage. There is nothing simple about agraphia, however. In fact, the complexities of written language disorder have made useful clinical correlations difficult.
D Frank Benson, Alfredo Ardila
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Agraphia

1993
Abstract Benedikt(1865) applied the term agraphia disorders of writing in 1865. Ogle (1867) found that, although aphasia and agraphia usually occur together, they were separable. He concluded that there were distinct cerebral centers for writing and speaking that were anatomically proximate.
Lauren Ullrich, David P Roeltgen
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Progressive Peripheral Agraphia

Neurocase, 2001
We describe RW, a patient who presented with writing difficulty that deteriorated over time. While her graphemes were typically legible, her writing was extremely slow, and her letters were written in an inconsistent and heterogeneous manner (e.g. each "a" in the word "banana" was produced in a different way).
M, Grossman   +8 more
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Alexia without agraphia

Neurology, 1976
This typical case of alexia without agraphia, caused by an astrocytoma, is the first recorded case in the literature of alexia without agraphia with a right homonymous hemianopia caused by a tumor. This case differs from previously reported cases of the syndrome by its fluctuating clinical course and its slow progression.
D N, Cohen   +4 more
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