The anatomy of aphasia revisited
- 14 March 2000
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 54 (5) , 1117-1123
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.54.5.1117
Abstract
Objective: To determine lesion locations associated with the various types of aphasic disorders in patients with stroke. Background: The anatomy of aphasia has been challenged by several recent studies. Discrepancies are likely to be due to methodologic issues. Methods: We examined 107 patients with a standardized aphasia battery and MRI. Three examiners blinded to the clinical data rated signal abnormalities in 69 predetermined regions of interest. The statistical procedure used classification tree testing, which selected regions associated with each aphasic disorder. Results: 1) Nonfluent aphasia depended on the presence of frontal or putaminal lesions; 2) repetition disorder on insula-external capsule lesions; 3) comprehension disorder on posterior lesions of the temporal gyri; 4) phonemic paraphasia on external capsule lesions extending either to the posterior part of the temporal lobe or to the internal capsule; 5) verbal paraphasia on temporal or caudate lesions; and 6) perseveration on caudate lesions. These analyses correctly classified 67% to 94% of patients. Conclusions: Lesion location is the main determinant of aphasic disorders at the acute stage. Most clinical–radiologic correlations supported the classic anatomy of aphasia.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Location of lesions in stroke patients with deficits in syntactic processing in sentence comprehensionBrain, 1996
- Neuropsychological changes related to unilateral lenticulostriate infarcts.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1994
- To what extent can aphasic syndromes be localized?Brain, 1993
- The case of aphasia or neglect after striatocapsular infarctionBrain, 1993
- Brain MR: pathologic correlation with gross and histopathology. 1. Lacunar infarction and Virchow-Robin spacesAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 1988
- CORRELATIONS OF SUBCORTICALCT LESION SITES AND APHASIA PROFILESBrain, 1987
- Relationship Between Lesion Extent in 'Wernicke's Area' on Computed Tomographic Scan and Predicting Recovery of Comprehension in Wernicke's AphasiaArchives of Neurology, 1987
- Anatomoclinical correlations of the aphasias as defined through computerized tomography: ExceptionsBrain and Language, 1985
- Localization in Transcortical Sensory AphasiaArchives of Neurology, 1982
- THE ANATOMICAL BASIS OF CONDUCTION APHASIABrain, 1980