Publications by authors named "M C Lauriot-Prevost"

Conduction aphasia is usually described as a repetition impairment. Semiology or pathophysiology cannot be explained with this definition. We report a single case particularly demonstrative.

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Impaired vision and cerebral blindness were observed in a patient who had suffered brain trauma. One year after the trauma, the impairment was characterized by low visual acuity, visual field restricted to central tunnel vision and impaired recognition of objects, line drawings, colors and faces. Vision improved six years after the brain trauma with more rapid recognition of objects and line drawings, increased visual acuity and broadening of the visual field.

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MRI was performed in 13 patients with the adult form of myotonic dystrophy (MD) and compared with that of sex- and age-matched normal controls. There was some cerebral atrophy in the patients and marked thickening of the skull in three of them, associated with ossification of the falx cerebri in two. We found high-signal areas on T2-weighted images in the white matter in 9 (70%) of the patients; five showed high-signal areas in the subcortical white matter of the temporal lobes.

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Right brain-damaged patients performed a confrontation naming task. Pictures were tachistoscopically presented to the right visual field and selected for their high degree of canonicity and name agreement measured in control subjects. Compared to controls, patients exhibited significant errors.

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