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Clinical and structural disconnectome evaluation in a case of optic aphasia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Optic Aphasia (OA) and Associative Visual Agnosia (AVA) are disorders that affect the ability to name objects presented visually, with OA allowing some access to semantic knowledge and AVA not.
  • The case study examines AA, an 81-year-old woman with a left occipital lesion and damage to the splenial pathway, highlighting her challenges in identifying visual stimuli.
  • The findings indicate that while AA has difficulties, there is still some semantic access possible from visual input, supporting the theory of visuo-verbal disconnection related to OA.

Article Abstract

Optic Aphasia (OA) and Associative Visual Agnosia (AVA) are neuropsychological disorders characterized by impaired naming on visual presentation. From a cognitive point of view, while stimulus identification is largely unimpaired in OA (where access to semantic knowledge is still possible), in AVA it is not. OA has been linked with right hemianopia and disconnection of the occipital right-hemisphere (RH) visual processing from the left hemisphere (LH) language areas.In this paper, we describe the case of AA, an 81-year-old housewife suffering from a deficit in naming visually presented stimuli after left occipital lesion and damage to the interhemispheric splenial pathway. AA has been tested through a set of tasks assessing different levels of visual object processing. We discuss behavioral performance as well as the pattern of lesion and disconnection in relation to a neurocognitive model adapted from Luzzatti and colleagues (1998). Despite the complexity of the neuropsychological picture, behavioral data suggest that semantic access from visual input is possible, while a lesion-based structural disconnectome investigation demonstrated the splenial involvement.Altogether, neuropsychological and neuroanatomical findings support the assumption of visuo-verbal callosal disconnection compatible with a diagnosis of OA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11374911PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00429-024-02818-zDOI Listing

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