Background/aims: Frank agrammatism, defined as the omission and/or substitution of grammatical morphemes with associated grammatical errors, is variably reported in patients with nonfluent variant primary progressive aphasia (nfPPA). This study addressed whether frank agrammatism is typical in agrammatic nfPPA patients when this feature is not required for diagnosis.
Method: We assessed grammatical production in 9 patients who satisfied current diagnostic criteria. Although the focus was agrammatism, motor speech skills were also evaluated to determine whether dysfluency arose primarily from apraxia of speech (AOS), instead of, or in addition to, agrammatism. Volumetric MRI analyses provided impartial imaging-supported diagnosis.
Results: The majority of cases exhibited neither frank agrammatism nor AOS.
Conclusion: There are nfPPA patients with imaging-supported diagnosis and preserved motor speech skills who do not exhibit frank agrammatism, and this may persist beyond the earliest stages of the illness. Because absence of frank agrammatism is a subsidiary diagnostic feature in the logopenic variant of PPA, this result has implications for differentiation of the nonfluent and logopenic variants, and indicates that PPA patients with nonfluent speech in the absence of frank agrammatism or AOS do not necessarily have the logopenic variant.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000448944 | DOI Listing |
Brain
April 2024
Memory and Aging Center, Department of Neurology, UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.
Cureus
October 2021
Internal Medicine, Detroit Medical Center/Wayne State University, Detroit, USA.
Expressive aphasia (non-fluent aphasia) is characterized by the inability to produce words or sentences. The most common cause of expressive aphasia is stroke, usually due to thrombus or emboli in the middle cerebellar artery or internal carotid artery affecting Broca's area. We present an important, reversible, and previously undescribed cause of a purely expressive aphasia secondary to steroid use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychologia
January 2021
Roxelyn & Richard Pepper Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, USA; Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer's Disease, Northwestern University, USA; Ken & Ruth Davee Department of Neurology, Northwestern University, USA.
Purpose: This study examined grammatical production impairments in primary progressive aphasia (PPA), as measured by structured tests and narrative samples. We aimed to quantify the strength of the relationship between grammatical measures across tasks, and identify factors that condition it. Three grammatical domains were investigated: overall sentence production, verb morphology, and verb-argument structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
June 2019
Health Sciences Library, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Purpose The aims of this systematic review are to (a) synthesize the literature on interventions targeting expressive communication in adults with autism spectrum disorder and (b) evaluate the effectiveness of the interventions. Method The literature search resulted in 7,196 articles. The research team used 2 reviewers and consensus for title/abstract review, full-text review, and quality review.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDement Geriatr Cogn Dis Extra
September 2016
Department of Speech-Language Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Ont., Canada; Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto, Ont, Canada.
Background/aims: Frank agrammatism, defined as the omission and/or substitution of grammatical morphemes with associated grammatical errors, is variably reported in patients with nonfluent variant primary progressive aphasia (nfPPA). This study addressed whether frank agrammatism is typical in agrammatic nfPPA patients when this feature is not required for diagnosis.
Method: We assessed grammatical production in 9 patients who satisfied current diagnostic criteria.
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