Role of the right and left hemispheres in recovery of function during treatment of intention in aphasia

被引:134
作者
Crosson, B
Moore, AB
Gopinath, K
White, KD
Wierenga, CE
Gaiefsky, ME
Fabrizio, KS
Peck, KK
Soltysik, D
Milsted, C
Briggs, RW
Conway, TW
Rothi, LJG
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Clin & Hlth Psychol, Gainesville, FL 32610 USA
[2] Malcom Randall Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Gainesville, FL USA
[3] McKnight Brain Inst, Gainesville, FL USA
[4] Univ Texas, SW Med Sch, Dallas, TX USA
关键词
D O I
10.1162/0898929053279487
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Two patients with residual nonfluent aphasia after ischemic stroke received an intention treatment that was designed to shift intention and language production mechanisms from the frontal lobe of the damaged left hemisphere to the right frontal lobe. Consistent with experimental hypotheses, the first patient showed improvement on the intention treatment hut not on a similar attention treatment. In addition, in keeping with experimental hypotheses, the patient showed a shift of activity to right presupplementary motor area and the right lateral frontal lobe from pre- to post-intention treatment functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of language production. In contrast, the second patient showed improvement on both the intention and attention treatments. During pre-treatment fMRI, she already showed lateralization of intention and language production mechanisms to the right hemisphere that continued into post-intention treatment imaging. From pre- to post-treatment fMRI of language production, both patients demonstrated increased activity in the posterior perisylvian cortex, although this activity was lateralized to left-hemisphere language areas in the second but not the first patient. The fact that the first patient's lesion encompassed almost all of the dominant basal ganglia and thalamus whereas the second patient's lesion spared these structures suggests that the dominant basal ganglia could Play a role in spontaneous reorganization of language production functions to the right hemisphere. Implications regarding the theoretical framework for the intention treatment are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:392 / 406
页数:15
相关论文
共 39 条
  • [1] Event-related brain potential imaging of semantic encoding during processing single words
    Abdullaev, YG
    Posner, MI
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 1998, 7 (01) : 1 - 13
  • [2] Alexander MP., 2003, BEHAV NEUROLOGY NEUR, P147
  • [3] Semantic neglect?
    Anderson, B
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1996, 60 (03) : 349 - 350
  • [4] [Anonymous], 1982, FREQUENCY ANAL ENGLI
  • [5] Overt verbal responding during fMRI scanning: Empirical investigations of problems and potential solutions
    Barch, DM
    Sabb, FW
    Carter, CS
    Braver, TS
    Noll, DC
    Cohen, JD
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 1999, 10 (06) : 642 - 657
  • [6] Cortical language activation in stroke patients recovering from aphasia with functional MRI
    Cao, Y
    Vikingstad, EM
    George, KP
    Johnson, AF
    Welch, KMA
    [J]. STROKE, 1999, 30 (11) : 2331 - 2340
  • [7] Behavioral and neurofunctional changes over time in healthy and aphasic subjects -: A PET language activation study
    Cardebat, D
    Démonet, F
    de Boissezon, X
    Marie, N
    Marié, RM
    Lambert, J
    Baron, JC
    Puel, M
    [J]. STROKE, 2003, 34 (12) : 2900 - 2906
  • [8] CATO M, 2004, ANN INT NEUR SOC M, P92
  • [9] The basal ganglia and semantic engagement: Potential insights from semantic priming in individuals with subcortical vascular lesions, Parkinson's disease, and cortical lesions
    Copland, D
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2003, 9 (07) : 1041 - 1052
  • [10] Processing lexical ambiguities in word triplets: Evidence of lexical-semantic deficits following dominant nonthalamic subcortical lesions
    Copland, DA
    Chenery, HJ
    Murdoch, BE
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 14 (03) : 379 - 390