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Functional and neuroanatomical analysis of extralinguistic disorders in right hemisphere-damaged patients

Functional and neuroanatomical analysis of extralinguistic disorders in right hemisphere-damaged patients

Jodzio, Krzysztof, Lojek, Emilia and Bryan, Karen ORCID: 0000-0003-0742-1193 (2005) Functional and neuroanatomical analysis of extralinguistic disorders in right hemisphere-damaged patients. Psychology of Language and Communication, 9 (1). pp. 55-73. ISSN 1234-2238

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Abstract

The purpose of this article was to determine the prevalence of extralinguistic (non-aphasic) disorders, its clinical picture, and neuroanatomical correlates in right hemisphere – damaged patients. The cerebral perfusion pattern was determined by single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in a group of 40 stroke patients with damage to the right hemisphere (RHD). The ontrol group included 60 healthy subjects. The Polish version of the Right Hemisphere Language Battery (RHLB-PL) was used in the study. The group of RHD patients was not homogeneous with respect to character and severity of language disturbances. Some patients show very mild and selective linguistic disturbances, while others demonstrate more serious and generalized difficulties. The RHD patients, in comparison to healthy individuals, exhibited several communicative impairments, “apragmatic” in nature, including difficulties in performing tests assessing inferential reasoning, lexical-semantic processes, metaphor comprehension, and receptive prosody. Discourse ability seems to be particularly susceptible to damage since 95% of patients obtained abnormal scores for Discourse Analysis. Language disorders assessed by the RHLB-PL were associated with a variety of SPECT findings: language difficulties coexisted with perfusion defects within RH mostly involving the frontal cortex and thalamus.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: extralinguistic disorders; right hemisphere – damaged patients
Faculty / School / Research Centre / Research Group: Vice-Chancellor's Group
Last Modified: 01 Mar 2018 20:12
URI: http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/18615

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