-
Brain & NeuroRehabilitation Nov 2023Crossed aphasia (CA) is a type of aphasia caused by cerebral hemispheric lesions on the same side of the dominant hand. The prevalence of CA is extremely rare. To the...
Crossed aphasia (CA) is a type of aphasia caused by cerebral hemispheric lesions on the same side of the dominant hand. The prevalence of CA is extremely rare. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report in Korea to conduct 6 years of long-term speech therapy in a case of a patient with CA. The patient was a 57-year-old right-handed man with aphasia caused by extensive acute infarction in the right middle cerebral artery territory. He presented with global aphasia, right-left disorientation, and agraphia. Language function recovered in the first 6 months and then plateaued.
PubMed: 38047091
DOI: 10.12786/bn.2023.16.e23 -
Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan) Feb 2024A 73-year-old woman with posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) presented with progressive apperceptive visual agnosia, alexia, agraphia, ventral simultanagnosia,...
A 73-year-old woman with posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) presented with progressive apperceptive visual agnosia, alexia, agraphia, ventral simultanagnosia, prosopagnosia, and allocentric (stimulus-centered) left-sided hemispatial neglect. All of these symptoms were attributed to damage to the bilateral occipito-temporal cortices, consistent with ventral variant PCA. While the Pittsburgh compound B uptake was extensively distributed throughout the occipito-parietal (dorsal) and occipito-temporal (ventral) areas, the THK5351 (ligand binding to tau aggregates/astrocyte gliosis) accumulation was limited to the ventral area. These findings suggest that local accumulation of tau proteins and/or astrocyte gliosis over the occipito-temporal cortices can result in ventral variant PCA.
PubMed: 38369357
DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.2844-23 -
Acta Neurologica Belgica Oct 2023
Topics: Male; Humans; Aged; Alexia, Pure; COVID-19; Stroke; Agraphia
PubMed: 35750954
DOI: 10.1007/s13760-022-02014-y -
Dementia & Neuropsychologia 2024This is the case report of a woman who started to write and read from right to left after anterior cerebral artery stroke, affecting the left supplementary motor area....
This is the case report of a woman who started to write and read from right to left after anterior cerebral artery stroke, affecting the left supplementary motor area. No cases were found in the literature with exactly the same characteristics. She has been able to read and write faster after rehabilitation approach at Sarah Network of Rehabilitation Hospitals, in the Belo Horizonte city unit, Brazil, despite the maintenance of the inversion. She returned to her previous activities in an adaptive way. It was discussed how the dysfunction in this cerebral area and its connections may disturb the reading strategy and direction.
PubMed: 38628560
DOI: 10.1590/1980-5764-DN-2023-0044 -
Cureus May 2024In right-handed individuals, aphasia resulting from right hemisphere damage is termed crossed aphasia and has a very low occurrence rate. Additionally, aphasia due to...
In right-handed individuals, aphasia resulting from right hemisphere damage is termed crossed aphasia and has a very low occurrence rate. Additionally, aphasia due to thalamic lesions often involves hemorrhage, with infarction cases less frequently reported. We present the case of an 81-year-old right-handed female who developed aphasia due to a right thalamic infarction. She exhibited characteristics typical of thalamic aphasia observed in left thalamic lesions. Furthermore, jargon agraphia manifested during writing tasks. This may suggest disinhibition of the left hemisphere writing motor memory by the right hemisphere language function.
PubMed: 38903355
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.60637 -
Cureus Jan 2024Alexia is an acquired reading disorder known as pure alexia or alexia without agraphia when unaccompanied by other higher-level deficits. We present the case of a...
Alexia is an acquired reading disorder known as pure alexia or alexia without agraphia when unaccompanied by other higher-level deficits. We present the case of a 40-year-old man experiencing a sudden-onset headache and blurred vision. Despite an absence of known medical history, the patient exhibited a distinctive difficulty in reading without impairing other language aspects accompanied by a right superior homonymous quadrantanopia. Through comprehensive ophthalmological and neurological evaluations, a diagnosis of pure alexia was established. An imaging scan uncovered a left posterior cerebral artery occlusion as the underlying cause. Meticulous assessments of visual acuity, perimetry, and non-visual functions played a pivotal role in decisively diagnosing this condition. This case emphasizes the indispensable role of ophthalmologists in recognizing urgent clinical conditions that extend beyond ophthalmic concerns.
PubMed: 38384633
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.52734