Title: Types%20of%20Aphasia
1Types of Aphasia
Ling 411 05
- Classifications are a necessary evil
- Antonio Damasio (1998)
2Wernickes 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
3Areas 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
4Definitions 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
5Principal cortical gyri (schematic)
Review
6Subtypes 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)
7Extra-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
8Two 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
9Extra-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)
10Extrasylvian motor aphasia
- Nonfluent output
- Delayed initiation
- Terse, poorly elaborated utterances
- Incomplete sentences
- Verbal paraphasia
- Good comprehension
- Good repetition
11Extrasylvian 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)
12Orientation terms (left hemisphere)
Dorsal
Rostral
Caudal
Ventral
13Extrasylvian 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)
14Principal cortical gyri
Supplementary motor area
Superior parietal lobule
15Extrasylvian 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
16Extrasylvian 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
17Extrasylvian 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
18Anomic 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
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