Primary progressive semantic aphasia: A case study

被引:44
作者
Kertesz, A [1 ]
Davidson, W [1 ]
McCabe, P [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Western Ontario, St Josephs Hlth Ctr, Dept Clin Neurol Sci, Lawson Res Inst, London, ON N6A 4V2, Canada
关键词
semantic aphasia; semantic dementia; semantic memory; transcortical sensory aphasia; Pick's disease;
D O I
10.1017/S1355617798003889
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
A longitudinal case study of a patient with a progressive loss of meaning of objects with preserved phonology and syntax is presented. Repeated measures of language, praxis, visual cognition, and semantic processing were carried out. The patient still has preserved conversational speech, social skills, and orientation in her 8th year of her illness, but shows severe anemia and comprehension deficit in all modalities of stimulus presentation. In addition to standardized tests of language, cognition, and memory, specific experiments of categorization, modalities of word access, item consistency, category specificity, and definition of words were carried out. Results indicate a frequency dependent loss of meaning that was consistent in all modalities and throughout all object categories. However, the relative preservation of visual categorization of all categories tested and the language based categorization of animals suggested some fractionation of semantic memory. Relative preservation of autobiographical and personal memories versus semantic memory was a striking observation. Evidence for selective impairment of central semantic processing was obtained from experiments indicating item consistency of loss and the lack of semantic cuing. Neuroimaging evidence of left temporal lobe atrophy and the classical picture is compatible with similar cases published under the term semantic dementia or "transcortical sensory aphasia with visual agnosia" and suggest the diagnosis of Pick's disease.
引用
收藏
页码:388 / 398
页数:11
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1992, HIGHER BRAIN FUNCTIO, DOI DOI 10.2496/APR.12.153
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1988, NEUROPSYCHOLOGY MENT
[3]   PROGRESSIVE LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT WITHOUT DEMENTIA - A CASE WITH ISOLATED CATEGORY SPECIFIC SEMANTIC DEFECT [J].
BASSO, A ;
CAPITANI, E ;
LAIACONA, M .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1988, 51 (09) :1201-1207
[4]   CATEGORY SPECIFIC PHONOLOGICAL DYSGRAPHIA [J].
BAXTER, DM ;
WARRINGTON, EK .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1985, 23 (05) :653-&
[5]   CONFRONTATION NAMING IMPAIRMENT IN DEMENTIA [J].
BAYLES, KA ;
TOMOEDA, CK .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1983, 19 (01) :98-114
[6]   POSTERIOR CORTICAL ATROPHY [J].
BENSON, DF ;
DAVIS, RJ ;
SNYDER, BD .
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, 1988, 45 (07) :789-793
[7]   THE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY OF FACIAL RECOGNITION [J].
BENTON, AL .
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST, 1980, 35 (02) :176-186
[8]   THE SEMANTIC DEFICIT IN APHASIA - THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SEMANTIC ERRORS IN AUDITORY COMPREHENSION AND PICTURE NAMING [J].
BUTTERWORTH, B ;
HOWARD, D ;
MCLOUGHLIN, P .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1984, 22 (04) :409-426
[9]   THE SEMANTIC DEFICIT HYPOTHESIS - PERCEPTUAL PARSING AND OBJECT CLASSIFICATION BY APHASIC PATIENTS [J].
CARAMAZZA, A ;
BERNDT, RS .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1982, 15 (01) :161-189
[10]   SEMANTIC MEMORY LOSS IN DEMENTIA OF ALZHEIMERS TYPE - WHAT DO VARIOUS MEASURES MEASURE [J].
CHERTKOW, H ;
BUB, D .
BRAIN, 1990, 113 :397-417