Types%20of%20Aphasia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Types%20of%20Aphasia

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Title: Types%20of%20Aphasia


1
Types of Aphasia
Ling 411 05
  • Classifications are a necessary evil
  • Antonio Damasio (1998)

2
Wernickes Aphasia
  • Impaired comprehension
  • Result of failures in phonological discrimination
  • Fluent verbal output
  • Augmented verbal output
  • Extra syllables at ends of words
  • Extra words at ends of phrases
  • Extra phrases at ends of sentences
  • Augmentations usually nonsensical
  • Syntax otherwise not too bad
  • Verbal paraphasia, including neologisms

3
Areas of damage in Wernickes aphasia
  • Always involved
  • Posterior superior temporal gyrus
  • The classical core of Wernickes area
  • Usually also involved
  • More of superior temporal gyrus
  • middle temporal gyrus
  • Temporal plane
  • Often also involved
  • Angular gyrus
  • Supramarginal gyrus
  • Temporal-occipital junction area

4
Definitions of Wernickes area
  • Narrow definition
  • Posterior superior temporal gyrus
  • Best definition
  • Posterior superior temporal gyrus and adjacent
    temporal plane and superior temporal sulcus
  • Broad definition (used by some)
  • Includes also angular gyrus and/or supramarginal
    gyrus
  • A.k.a posterior language area

5
Principal cortical gyri (schematic)
Review
6
Subtypes of Wernicke aphasia
  • Not discretely different
  • Rather, spans along a scale
  • Type I
  • Damage is more anterior
  • Phonological recognition most affected
  • Word deafness
  • Type II
  • Damage is more posterior, incl. angular gyrus
  • More word-blindness than word-deafness
  • I.e., alexia
  • Intermediate types also occur
  • Obviously, all subtypes of Wernicke aphasia are
    variations on a continuum
  • (BensonArdila144)

7
Extra-Sylvian Aphasic Syndromes
  • Extra-Sylvian (a.k.a. Transcortical)
  • Extrasylvian motor aphasia
  • Type I
  • Type II
  • Extrasylvian sensory aphasia
  • Sometimes just called anomic aphasia
  • Type I
  • Type II

8
Two Different Classification Schemes
  • Damasio
  • Wernickes aphasia
  • Brocas aphasia
  • Conduction aphasia
  • Transcortical sensory aph.
  • Transcortical motor aph.
  • Global aphasia
  • Anomic aphasia
  • Alexia
  • Benson Ardila
  • Wernicke aphasia
  • Broca aphasia
  • Conduction aphasia
  • Extrasylvian sensory aph.
  • Extrasylvian motor aph.
  • Global aphasia
  • Anomic aphasia
  • Wernicke II or Posterior extrasylvian

9
Extra-Sylvian Aphasic Syndromes
  • In all perisylvian syndromes, repetition is
    faulty
  • In all extra-sylvian aphasic syndromes,
    repetition is intact
  • (why?)
  • Aphasia without repetition disturbance almost
    invariably indicates pathology outside the
    perisylvian region (BA 1996146)

10
Extrasylvian motor aphasia
  • Nonfluent output
  • Delayed initiation
  • Terse, poorly elaborated utterances
  • Incomplete sentences
  • Verbal paraphasia
  • Good comprehension
  • Good repetition

11
Extrasylvian motor aphasia, Type I
  • Left dorsolateral prefrontal damage
  • Anterior and superior to Brocas area
  • Non-fluent output, but repetition good
  • Articulation is normal
  • Difficulty following commands
  • Understand command but do not respond
  • Damage anterior and superior to Brocas area
    (Brodmann areas 45, 46, and/or part of area 9)
    (BA 1996152)

12
Orientation terms (left hemisphere)
Dorsal
Rostral
Caudal
Ventral
13
Extrasylvian motor aphasia, Type II
  • Damage to supplementary motor area
  • Occlusion of left anterior cerebral artery
  • Non-fluent output, but good repetition
  • Difficulty initiating speech
  • Perhaps a purely motor disorder that does not
    involve basic language functions
  • (in which case it isnt really a type of aphasia)

14
Principal cortical gyri
Supplementary motor area
Superior parietal lobule
15
Extrasylvian sensory aphasia
  • Speech is fluent
  • Good repetition
  • Comprehension is impaired
  • Naming is impaired
  • Paraphasia is frequent, even verbose
  • Semantic substitutions
  • Neologisms
  • Echolalia (patients repeat words of examiner)
  • Pointing is impaired
  • Two subtypes

16
Extrasylvian sensory aphasia, Type I
  • Damage to temporal-parietal-occipital junction
    area
  • I.e., lower angular gyrus and upper area 37
  • Fluent spontaneous output
  • Poor comprehension
  • Naming strongly impaired
  • Semantic paraphasia

17
Extrasylvian sensory aphasia, Type II
  • Damage to upper angular gyrus
  • Fluent output
  • Variable ability to comprehend speech
  • Naming strongly impaired
  • Few semantic paraphasias
  • Repetition excellent
  • Many circumlocutions

18
Anomic aphasia
  • Perhaps part of a continuum with extrasylvian
    sensory aphasia
  • Comprehension is good in many cases
  • Unlike extrasylvian sensory aphasia
  • Production and repetition are good
  • Cannot be reliably localized
  • Many different areas of damage can result in
    naming difficulty
  • But different semantic categories may be impaired
    with different areas of damage
  • Maybe not a true syndrome BensonArdila

19
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