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A 55-year-old patient was admitted with weakness in the right extremities and with significant language deficits. Both computed tomography (CT) and positron-emission tomography (PET) using 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose were done within 1 month and repeated at 10 months after onset. Language evaluation
To compare cerebral circulation in aphasic patients who had cerebral hemorrhage against those who with cerebral thrombosis, we studies 50 patients with hypertensive intracranial (putaminal) hemorrhage and 20 patients with cerebral thrombosis whose diagnoses were confirmed on repeated CT scan and
OBJECTIVE
Characterize the profile of aphasic syndromes determined by aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) of the left middle cerebral artery (LMCA).
METHODS
An analytical, retrospective, cross-sectional study was conducted using a database of cognitive assessments of 193 patients with aSAH
Few studies have investigated language recovery patterns and the mechanisms of crossed bilingual aphasia following a subcortical stroke. In particular, Korean-Japanese crossed bilingual aphasia has not been reported. A 47-year-old, right-handed man was diagnosed with an extensive right basal ganglia
A 74-year-old, right-handed woman with a right thalamic hemorrhage and aphasia is described. Sequential neurologic examinations and aphasia testing were carried out during a 1-year period and the results are reported. The patient exhibited a language deficit resembling a transcortical aphasia in the
In a series of 14 thalamic hemorrhage documented by Computerized Axial Tomography (CT) scans, aphasia was present in seven out of eight patients with left lesions while it was absent in the six patients with right lesions. In three cases where detailed language testing was performed, aphasia was
Numerous reports of aphasia after subcortical lesions have produced incomplete agreement about basic clinico-anatomic correlations. Some disagreement has arisen from methodologic differences. To control for some of the common differences, we analyzed 13 patients with left putaminal hemorrhage
There have been few case reports of pure anomic aphasia and the underlying mechanism remains to be clarified. We report a patient in whom pure anomic aphasia was caused by subcortical hemorrhage in the left temporo-parieto-occipital lobe. Based on magnetic resonance images and cerebral blood flow
A left-handed patient with a right thalamic hemorrhage and disordered speech is described. Sequential examinations and aphasia testing were done during a 1-year follow-up period and the results are reported. This case supports those authors who have described characteristics they feel are helpful in
In a patient without fluent speech, good comprehension, aphasia and frequent neologisms, computerized tomography (CT scan) demonstrated a left posterior thalamic hemorrhage sparing other language areas. We discuss the existence and the anatomical and pathogenetic mechanisms of thalamic aphasia.
Aphasia was evaluated in 21 right-handed patients (39-74 years old) with putaminal hemorrhage, and compared with that caused by thalamic hemorrhage. The patients were divided into three groups by the volume of the hematoma: small hematoma (I, n = 6), middle hematoma (II, n = 8) and large hematoma
A case of transcortical sensory aphasia caused by a cerebral haemorrhage in the left frontal lobe is presented. A 72-year-old right-handed woman was admitted to the hospital, with a history of acute onset of speech disturbance and headache. On initial assessment, her spontaneous speech was fluent.
Objective: To investigate the comprehensive outcomes in aphasic patients, including their cognitive and functional status after ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke. It also aimed to clarify whether aphasia is a prognostic factor for cognitive
The Vision, Aphasia, and Neglect (VAN) screening tool is a simple bedside test developed to identify patients with large vessel occlusion stroke. In the setting of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), there are very few bedside predictors of need for neurosurgical interventions other than Five right-handed patients suffering from a recent CT-assessed left posterior thalamic hemorrhage are reported. In all patients a standard language examination performed within one month after stroke onset did not reveal aphasic disturbances. While the present series argues for the role of