AI Article Synopsis

  • A 69-year-old woman experienced a cerebral infarction affecting her left anterior cingulate cortex and corpus callosum, leading to unique symptoms like hyperlexia and ambient echolalia.
  • *Hyperlexia involved her reading words and repeating unrelated conversations or announcements, while she also displayed behaviors like visual groping and compulsively handling tools.
  • *These combined symptoms, attributed to the brain damage, suggest a breakdown in the inhibition of established motor functions connected to the supplementary motor area and the damaged anterior cingulate cortex.

Article Abstract

We report the case of a 69-year-old woman with cerebral infarction in the left anterior cingulate cortex and corpus callosum. She showed hyperlexia, which was a distinctive reading phenomenon, as well as ambient echolalia. Clinical features also included complex disorders such as visual groping, compulsive manipulation of tools, and callosal disconnection syndrome. She read words written on the cover of a book and repeated words emanating from unrelated conversations around her or from hospital announcements. The combination of these two features due to a focal lesion has never been reported previously. The supplementary motor area may control the execution of established subroutines according to external and internal inputs. Hyperlexia as well as the compulsive manipulation of tools could be interpreted as faulty inhibition of preexisting essentially intact motor subroutines by damage to the anterior cingulate cortex reciprocally interconnected with the supplementary motor area.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13554790902842037DOI Listing

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