There are very few longitudinal studies investigating functional recovery in aphasics affected by subcortical lesions. In addition, no longitudinal follow-up studies exist of patients with subcortical crossed aphasia. Our aim was to investigate functional recovery in two anomic patients with subcortical aphasia, one crossed aphasia and one standard, uncrossed aphasia due to a similar subcortical lesion. An er-fMRI follow-up paradigm was employed during a picturenaming task. Both patients were scanned prior to speech therapy (T0), after 3 months of anomia-specific rehabilitation (T1) and following 6 months of conventional language rehabilitation (T2). Irrespectively of lesion lateralization, fMRI data disclosed a grounding role for homologue naming-specific areas (respectively,LIFG and RIFG) in determining the progressive pattern of behavioural naming recovery throughout different disease phases. Thus, functional recovery, parallelled by improvement in behavioural naming performance, seems to be strictly related to recruitment of homologue areas in the hemisphere opposite to the aphasiogenic lesion.

Functional recovery in subcortical crossed and standard aphasia

Della Rosa Pasquale A;
2014

Abstract

There are very few longitudinal studies investigating functional recovery in aphasics affected by subcortical lesions. In addition, no longitudinal follow-up studies exist of patients with subcortical crossed aphasia. Our aim was to investigate functional recovery in two anomic patients with subcortical aphasia, one crossed aphasia and one standard, uncrossed aphasia due to a similar subcortical lesion. An er-fMRI follow-up paradigm was employed during a picturenaming task. Both patients were scanned prior to speech therapy (T0), after 3 months of anomia-specific rehabilitation (T1) and following 6 months of conventional language rehabilitation (T2). Irrespectively of lesion lateralization, fMRI data disclosed a grounding role for homologue naming-specific areas (respectively,LIFG and RIFG) in determining the progressive pattern of behavioural naming recovery throughout different disease phases. Thus, functional recovery, parallelled by improvement in behavioural naming performance, seems to be strictly related to recruitment of homologue areas in the hemisphere opposite to the aphasiogenic lesion.
2014
Istituto di Bioimmagini e Fisiologia Molecolare - IBFM
Subcortical aphasia
Crossed aphasia
Functional recovery
Functional neuroimaging
Aphasia recovery
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/323472
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact