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Mixed Transcortical Aphasia: Repetition without Meaning

2015
Although mixed transcortical aphasia (MTA) is a rare syndrome, it constitutes an interesting case for modern neuroanatomically driven language models. This is because its existence may be seen as congruent with the assumption of an independently operating “dorsal stream” in language processing. Predicted by the earliest models of language processing in
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Acute mixed transcortical aphasia following an infarction in the left putamen

Aphasiology, 1998
Abstract Mixed transcortical aphasia is an uncommon occurrence with acute stroke. A 62 year old female is described with mixed transcortical aphasia and right hemiparesis and occlusion of the left internal carotid artery. The CT scan of the brain showed an infarction in the left putamen indicating that there is more than one anatomic possibility ...
N. Nagaratnam, J. S. Gilhotra
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Behavioral and neoronal changes during treatment of mixed transcortical aphasia: A case study

Cognition, 1993
The development of language mechanisms outside the traditional language regions is evidenced by the case of K.S., a patient with chronic mixed transcortical aphasia, that is, good repetition performance compared to all other language abilities. The aphasia was caused by an infarction of the left a.
F, Pulvermüller, P W, Schönle
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Acute mixed transcortical aphasia with bihemispheric neurological deficits following diffuse cerebral dysfunction

Aphasiology, 2000
A 78 year old man presented with acute mixed transcortical aphasia with intact naming and bilateral involvement of the motor systems following a left internal carotid artery stenosis. The CT scan showed hypodense areas in the border zones of the left hemisphere together with diffuse areas of ischaemia.
N. Nagaratnam, K. Nagaratnam
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Advanced disconnectomic analyses reveal repetition pathways in a case of mixed transcortical aphasia [PDF]

open access: possibleBrain and Cognition
Mixed Transcortical Aphasia (MTA) is an infrequent aphasic syndrome, characterized by poor comprehension and production in oral language abilities and poor performance in written language abilities. However, individuals with MTA typically retain the ability to repeat.
Irene Bellin   +6 more
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[Mixed aphasia with jargonographia in a right-handed patient].

Revue neurologique, 2003
We report a case of crossed aphasia with jargonagraphia in a forty-eight year old right handed monolingual man without family history of handedness or prior neurological illness. He developed a right temporo-insulo-parietal hamatomae documented by CT scan and accompanied by aphasia, left hemineglect, left hemiplegia, left lateral homonymous hemianopsia.
F, Sene Diouf   +4 more
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A mixed methods investigation of cognition and language in post-stroke aphasia

2023
Language breakdown after stroke has been extensively studied in the aphasiology literature. However, strokes are diffuse lesions and can result in cognitive impairments beyond language, in domains such as attention, executive functions, memory and visuospatial deficits.
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Crossed Mixed Transcortical Aphasia with Hypernomia

European Neurology, 1997
T, Fujii   +4 more
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Primary Tauopathy With Logopenic/Semantic Mixed Progressive Aphasia and Frontotemporal Dementia-like Behavior

Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology
Here we present the cases of two individuals with language and behavioral symptoms indicative of the early clinical manifestations of both Alzheimer disease (AD) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). Phonological language symptoms similar to those evident in logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia suggested AD pathology, while semantic ...
Akihiro Takasaki   +7 more
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Mixed transcortical aphasia: a case report

Neurological Sciences, 2015
Elena Cecilia Rosca, Mihaela Simu
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