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Neural Predictors for the Generalization of Semantic and Phonological Treatment to Discourse Performance in Chronic Post-Stroke Aphasia. [PDF]
Giglio L +8 more
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Two Languages and One Aphasia: A Systematic Scoping Review of Primary Progressive Aphasia in Chinese Bilingual Speakers, and Implications for Diagnosis and Clinical Care. [PDF]
Han W, Zhou L, Lu J, Pill S.
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Transcortical mixed aphasia with left frontoparietal lesions
Neuroradiology, 1996We present a case of transcortical mixed aphasia following a left frontoparietal infarct caused by vasospasm after subarachnoid haemorrhage. Although CT showed low-density areas in the left frontal lobe and basal ganglia, single photon emission CT revealed a wider area of low perfusion over the entire left hemisphere, except for the left perisylvian ...
S, Maeshima +5 more
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A Degenerative Form of Mixed Transcortical Aphasia
Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 2018Mixed transcortical aphasia (MTA) is characterized by decreased spontaneous speech, impaired naming, and poor comprehension, but with intact repetition. MTA has been reported to be the sequela of left hemisphere watershed infarction that isolates Wernicke’s perisylvian arc.
Leila, Saadatpour +4 more
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Logopenic, mixed, or Alzheimer-related aphasia?
Neurology, 2014This study tested the hypothesis that patients with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) who do not meet the proposed criteria for any of the recognized subtypes would have the atrophy pattern reported in the past for logopenic variant PPA (lvPPA), in turn suggesting that the PPA of likely Alzheimer disease origin is more variable than that captured in ...
Sajjadi, Seyed Ahmad +2 more
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Repetition of Affective Prosody in Mixed Transcortical Aphasia
Archives of Neurology, 1984Two patients with mixed transcortical aphasia could repeat propositional speech but not affective prosody. These findings suggest that the intact perisylvian region responsible for propositional speech does not mediate effective prosody. We propose that affective prosody is incorporated into propositional speech by means of an interhemispheric ...
L J, Speedie, H B, Coslett, K M, Heilman
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ACUTE TRANSCORTICAL MIXED APHASIA
Brain, 1988Four of 1,200 consecutive patients with their first stroke showed acute transcortical mixed aphasia (TMA) characterized by nonfluent speech with impaired naming, semantic paraphasias, echolalia, impaired comprehension, good repetition, reading, and writing on dictation.
J, Bogousslavsky, F, Regli, G, Assal
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A CASE OF MIXED TRANSCORTICAL APHASIA WITH INTACT NAMING
Brain, 1976Altholgh Lichtheim recognized that Wernicke's 'reflex arch' (primary auditory area, to Wernicke's area, to Broca's area, to primary motor area) was important for repetition, he recognized that other areas of the brain (for example, area of concepts or semantic area) must be important in comprehension and voluntary speech.
K M, Heilman, D M, Tucker, E, Valenstein
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