11 ফলাফল
A 48-year-old man presented with impaired joint movement and buccofacial apraxia. The disease progressed for six years associating an akineto-hypertonic syndrome, marked anarthria, saliva incontinence, bi-opercular syndrome, bucco-facial apraxia, severe global gestual apraxia and a frontal syndrom.
We describe eight patients with slowly progressive speech production deficit combining speech apraxia, dysarthria, dysprosody and orofacial apraxia, and initially no other deficit in other language and non-language neuropsychological domains. Long-term follow-up (6-10 years) in 4 cases showed an
The diagnosis of childhood neurological disorders remains challenging given the overlapping clinical presentation across subgroups and heterogeneous presentation within subgroups. To determine the underlying genetic cause of a severe neurological disorder in a large consanguineous Pakistani family
BACKGROUND
Progressive anarthria is defined as a clinical entity with a degenerative origin consisting in progressive difficulty in articulating while grammatical, semantic and graphic aspects of language are preserved. It is included within the group of processes affecting restricted areas of the
Progressive anarthria is a focal cortical degenerative disorder characterized by a profound, progressive alteration in speech without impairment in other cognitive domains. The first symptoms consist of an alteration in the articulation of speech producing telegraphic speech. The disorder invariably
A 66-year-old right-handed man developed pure anarthria following pure word deafness. In addition to language disorders, his behavior gradually changed and finally included violence against his wife. Brain magnetic resonance imagings revealed atrophy of the left perisylvian area, which included the
BACKGROUND
First described 15 years ago, primary progressive anarthria is a focal cortical atrophy defined as a rare progressive impairment of speech associated with orofacial apraxia and leading to mutism with a frontal lobe syndrome. The aim of this study was to analyze clinical and
Progressive anarthria is usually classified as a tau pathology. We report an 87-year-old female with a family history of ALS and Parkinsonism, presenting with progressive anarthria. Molecular genetics analyses showed a heterozygous mutation S393L on exon 6 of the TARDBP gene. It has been previously
We describe a patient with a progressive loss of speech up to muteness due to frontal atrophy. The clinical and neuropsychological examination documented a severe progressive articulatory disorder associated with a mild language deficit consisting of agrammatic production and spelling errors.
OBJECTIVE
In dystonia the formulation of a clinical syndrome is paramount to refine the list of etiologies. We here describe the rare association of dystonia with anarthria/aphonia, by examining a large cohort of patients, to provide a narrow field of underlying conditions and a practical