Title: APRAXIA: Neuropsychological-Information Processing Models
1APRAXIA Neuropsychological-Information
Processing Models
- Kenneth M. Heilman M.D.
- The James E. Rooks Jr. Distinguished Professor of
Neurology, University of Florida, College of
Medicine
2Definition
- Exclusionary The loss of the ability to perform
purposeful skilled movements when this deficit
can not be explained by motor deficits (e.g.,
weakness), sensory defects, movements disorders
(tremor, ataxia, chorea, athetosis, ballismus,
myoclonus etc) or certain cognitive disorders
(e.g., poor comprehension). - Inclusionary There are 5 major types of apraxia
and each are defined by the task demands and
types of errors.
3Types of Limb Apraxia
- 1. Limb-kinetic
- 2. Ideomotor
- 3. Dissociation and Conduction
- 4. Ideational
- 5. Conceptual
4LIMB-KINETIC APRAXIA
- Testing 1) pegboard 2) pincher grasp to pick up
small coins 3) coin rotation. - Error Type Loss of finger deftness or dexterity.
Loss of the ability to perform independent, but
coordinated precise finger movements. - Pathophysiology Injury to corticospinal system
and/or convexity premotor cortex. Left
hemisphere dominance.
5IDEOMOTOR APRAXIA
- Testing 1. Performance of transitive movement
to command (e.g., show me how you would slice
bread with a knife. - 2. Imitation of transitive movements.
- 3. Use of actual tools and implements
- 4. Discrimination between correct and incorrect
postures and movements.
6IDEOMOTOR APRAXIACONT
- Error Types
- 1. Postural Errors a) Incorrect posture b)
Body-part as tool. - 2. Movement Errors a) Movement of incorrect join
or joints b) Poor joint coordination. - 3. Orientation Error Not properly directing
action toward target. - 4. Timing-Speed Errors
7PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- 1. Callosal Lesions
- A) Geschwind and Kaplan, right arm normal,
left impaired to command onlypossible language
disconnection (see Fig.)? -
- B) Watson and Heilman, right arm normal,
left arm impaired to command, imitation, and use
of actual objectsdisconnection of movement
representations. - 2. Left Hemisphere Lesions
- A) Asymbolia apraxia and aphasia can
be dissociated -
- B) Geschwind Intrahemispheric
disconnection-cannot explain impaired imitation
and actual object use (see Fig). - C) Heilman-Rothi- lateralized movement
representations in left parietal lobe (see Fig).
8CALLOSAL APRAXIA-VERBAL DISCONNECTION
LT RT
PMC
MC
SSC
Lexical- Sematics
VAA
VC
9Geschwinds Model of Ideomotor Apraxia
Right Premotor Cortex
Right Motor Cortex
Wernickes area
Left Motor Cortex
Left Premotor Cortex
Auditory cortex
10Heilman-Rothi Model
SMA Premotor Cortex
Object Recognition Units
Motor Cortex
Movement Formula
Convexity Premotor Cortex
Lexicon
11IDEOMOTOR APRAXIA
RT MOTOR CORTEX
SMA Premotor Cortex
Object Recognition Units
LT MOTOR CORTEX
Movement Formula
Convexity Premotor Cortex
Lexicon
12Conceptual Apraxia
- Definition A loss of mechanical knowledge, such
that a patient cannot select the proper tools to
perform a tasks, or does not understand the
mechanical advantage offered by tools.
13Conceptual Apraxia Continued
- Testing
- 1) Tool Selection (e.g., Patient is shown
incomplete task, such a partially driven in nail
and tools such as a hammer, screwdriver, hand
saw, wrench, and can opener. The patient is asked
to point to the tool need to complete the task. - 2) Alternate Tools (e.g., The hammer is taken
away and the patient is asked, What tool would
you use now? - 3) Developing Tools (e.g., The patient is shown a
wooden block with an eye hook on top which is
sitting on the bottom of a plexiglass tube. The
patient is given a wire and asked to retrieve
block. The patient needs to make hook.)?
14Conceptual Apraxia Continued
- Errors Inability to correctly perform the tests
mentioned above. - Pathophysiology Loss of action-tool semantics.
In the right handed people this knowledge is
stored in the left hemisphere and functional
imaging suggests that the left parietal lobe
might also be important for storing these
representations.
15Conceptual Apraxia
Lexical Semantics
Action-Tool Semantics
SMA Premotor Cortex
Motor Cortex
Movement Formula
Object Recognition Units
Convexity Premotor Cortex
Motor Neurons
16Dissociation Apraxia
- Definition Inability to perform correct
pantomimes to a modality specific stimulus. - Testing Pantomime to command, seeing tool or
object, feeling tool or object and imitation. - Error Types Failure in one modality
(e.g.,command), but normal performance in other
modalities (e.g., seeing tool.)? - Pathophysiology Disconnection of intact movement
representations from modality specific input (see
figure).
17Dissociation Apraxia
SMA Premotor Cortex
Object Recognition Units
Motor Cortex
Movement Formula
Convexity Premotor Cortex
Lexical Semantics
18Dissociation and Conduction ApraxiasAVerbal
dissociation apraxia B Visual dissociation
apraxia CConduction apraxia
Lexical Semantics
Action-Tool Semantics
A
SMA Premotor Cortex
Motor Cortex
Verbal command
B
Movement Formula
Object Recognition Units
Convexity Premotor Cortex
Visual Assn Cortex V5
View tool
C
View Pantomime
19Ideational Apraxia
- Definition Loss of the ability to order a series
of acts to achieve a goal. - Testing Present patient with items needed to
complete a task such as making a sandwich (bread,
lettuce, tomatoes, cheese, mayo, ham, and a
knife). The ask patient to make sandwich. - Errors Patient makes errors in ordering a
series of acts (e.g., cuts bread in half before
putting on the ham etc. - Pathophysiology Not fully investigated
20PRAXIS SYSTEMS
To spinal cord
MOTOR CORTEX
Right Hemisphere
PREMOTOR CORTEX
CORPUS CALLOSUM
OBJECT UNITS
ACTION SEMANTICS
Visual input
PREMOTOR COREX
MOVEMENT REPRESENTATIONS
MOTOR CORTEX
Visual gesture input
LEXICAL- SEMANTICS
Auditory input
To spinal cord
21SUMMARYadissociation apraxia bconceptual
apraxia cideomotor apraxia dlimb-kinetic
apraxia e conduction apraxia
Lexical - Semantics
b
Action-Tool Semantics
c
SMA Premotor Cortex
a
Motor Cortex
c
Object Recognition Units
a
Movement Formula
Convexity Premotor Cortex
d
d
c
d
V-5
e