نتایج جستجو برای: nonfluent aphasia

تعداد نتایج: 8263  

Journal: :Stroke 1976
J C Brust S Q Shafer R W Richter B Bruun

Previous surveys of stroke populations have offered only cursory information on language disturbance, and, conversely, few surveys of aphasic populations have dealth exclusively with stroke or with acute phenomena. This paper describes aphasia in 850 acute stroke patients consecutively registered by the Harlem Regional Stroke Program, of whom 177 (21%) were aphasic; of these, nine were of Broca...

Journal: :Neurology 2010
D Gunawardena S Ash C McMillan B Avants J Gee M Grossman

OBJECTIVE To investigate the cognitive and neural basis for nonfluent speech in progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA). BACKGROUND Nonfluent speech is the hallmark feature of PNFA, and this has been attributed to impairments in syntactic processing, motor-speech planning, and executive functioning that also occur in these patients. Patients with PNFA have left inferior frontal atrophy. METHOD...

Journal: :Stroke 1988
J M Ferro M Crespo

Etiology, neuropsychological deficits, aphasia type, and recovery were retrospectively studied in 254 young adults with stroke. Cardiac embolism was the most common cause of stroke in patients younger than 40, while atherosclerosis was the most frequent etiology among those aged 41-50 years. In 166 aphasic patients, Broca's aphasia was the most common while Wernicke's and transcortical aphasias...

2016
Maria V. Ivanova Svetlana V. Kuptsova Nina F. Dronkers

Background: Overall, there is growing consensus that working memory (WM) should be routinely assessed in individuals with aphasia as it can contribute significantly to their level of language impairment and be an important factor in treatment planning. However, there is still no consensus in the field as to which tasks should be used to assess WM in aphasia. The two main alternatives are adapte...

Journal: :Brain and language 1998
M A Naeser C L Palumbo M N Prete P M Fitzpatrick M Mimura R Samaraweera M L Albert

This study examined 12 aphasia patients at approximately 1 year poststroke (Time 1) and again at 5-12 years poststroke (Time 2) with language testing and CT scan. Significant increases in naming scores, and phrase length in nonfluent speech were observed after 5 years poststroke. Significant expansion in visible lesion borders (lesion size) was observed after 5 years poststroke; an increase in ...

Journal: :Brain and language 2014
Catherine Y Wan Xin Zheng Sarah Marchina Andrea Norton Gottfried Schlaug

Using a pre-post design, eleven chronic stroke patients with large left hemisphere lesions and nonfluent aphasia underwent diffusion tensor imaging and language testing before and after receiving 15 weeks of an intensive intonation-based speech therapy. This treated patient group was compared to an untreated patient group (n=9) scanned twice over a similar time period. Our results showed that t...

Journal: :Brain and language 2005
Margaret A Naeser Paula I Martin Marjorie Nicholas Errol H Baker Heidi Seekins Masahito Kobayashi Hugo Theoret Felipe Fregni Jose Maria-Tormos Jacquie Kurland Karl W Doron Alvaro Pascual-Leone

Functional imaging studies with nonfluent aphasia patients have observed "over-activation" in right (R) language homologues. This may represent a maladaptive strategy; suppression may result in language improvement. We applied slow, 1 Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to an anterior portion of R Broca's homologue daily, for 10 days in four aphasia patients who were 5-11 yea...

Journal: :Archives of neurology 2010
Andrew Kertesz Sarah Jesso Michal Harciarek Mervin Blair Paul McMonagle

OBJECTIVES To describe a large, clinically defined cohort of patients with semantic dementia (SD) that highlights important, sometimes overlooked features and to compare it with similar entities. DESIGN Cohort study. SETTING A cognitive neurology clinic. PATIENTS A population of 48 patients clinically diagnosed with SD was contrasted with 52 patients with progressive nonfluent aphasia, 42...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2004
Margaret A Naeser Paula I Martin Errol H Baker Steven M Hodge Susan E Sczerzenie Marjorie Nicholas Carole L Palumbo Harold Goodglass Arthur Wingfield Ranji Samaraweera Gordon Harris Abigail Baird Perry Renshaw Deborah Yurgelun-Todd

This study examined activation levels in the left (L) supplementary motor area (SMA) and the right (R) SMA (separately), and activation in nine R perisylvian language homologues during overt, propositional speech in chronic nonfluent aphasia patients. Previous functional imaging studies with a variety of chronic aphasia patients have reported activation in these regions during different languag...

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