A PET study of the neural systems of stuttering

被引:325
作者
Fox, PT
Ingham, RJ
Ingham, JC
Hirsch, TB
Downs, JH
Martin, C
Jerabek, P
Glass, T
Lancaster, JL
机构
[1] UNIV TEXAS, HLTH SCI CTR, DEPT RADIOL, SAN ANTONIO, TX 78284 USA
[2] UNIV CALIF SANTA BARBARA, DEPT SPEECH & HEARING SCI, SANTA BARBARA, CA 93106 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1038/382158a0
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
THE cause of stuttering is unknown(1). Failure to develop left-hemispheric dominance for speech is a long-standing theory(1) although others implicate the motor system more broadly(2), often postulating hyperactivity of the right (language nondominant) cerebral hemisphere(3). As knowledge of motor circuitry has advanced(4), theories of stuttering have become more anatomically specific, postulating hyperactivity of premotor cortex, either directly(5) or through connectivity with the thalamus and basal ganglia(6), Alternative theories target the auditory(7) and speech productions(8,9) systems. By contrasting stuttering with fluent speech using positron emission tomography combined with chorus reading to induce fluency, we found support for each of these hypotheses, Stuttering induced widespread over-activations of the motor system in both cerebrum and cerebellum, with right cerebral dominance. Stuttered reading lacked left-lateralized activations of the auditory system, which are thought to support the self-monitoring of speech, and selectively deactivated a frontal-temporal system implicated in speech production, Induced fluency decreased or eliminated the overactivity in most motor areas, and largely reversed the auditory-system underactivations and the deactivation of the speech production system. Thus stuttering is a disorder affecting the multiple neural systems used for speaking.
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页码:158 / 162
页数:5
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