Literature DB >> 17947337

Word-finding difficulty: a clinical analysis of the progressive aphasias.

Jonathan D Rohrer1, William D Knight, Jane E Warren, Nick C Fox, Martin N Rossor, Jason D Warren.   

Abstract

The patient with word-finding difficulty presents a common and challenging clinical problem. The complaint of 'word-finding difficulty' covers a wide range of clinical phenomena and may signify any of a number of distinct pathophysiological processes. Although it occurs in a variety of clinical contexts, word-finding difficulty generally presents a diagnostic conundrum when it occurs as a leading or apparently isolated symptom, most often as the harbinger of degenerative disease: the progressive aphasias. Recent advances in the neurobiology of the focal, language-based dementias have transformed our understanding of these processes and the ways in which they breakdown in different diseases, but translation of this knowledge to the bedside is far from straightforward. Speech and language disturbances in the dementias present unique diagnostic and conceptual problems that are not fully captured by classical models derived from the study of vascular and other acute focal brain lesions. This has led to a reformulation of our understanding of how language is organized in the brain. In this review we seek to provide the clinical neurologist with a practical and theoretical bridge between the patient presenting with word-finding difficulty in the clinic and the evidence of the brain sciences. We delineate key illustrative speech and language syndromes in the degenerative dementias, compare these syndromes with the syndromes of acute brain damage, and indicate how the clinical syndromes relate to emerging neurolinguistic, neuroanatomical and neurobiological insights. We propose a conceptual framework for the analysis of word-finding difficulty, in order both better to define the patient's complaint and its differential diagnosis for the clinician and to identify unresolved issues as a stimulus to future work.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17947337      PMCID: PMC2373641          DOI: 10.1093/brain/awm251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  190 in total

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Authors:  L Cohen; N Benoit; P Van Eeckhout; B Ducarne; P Brunet
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7.  Multiple patterns of writing disorders in dementia of the Alzheimer type and their evolution.

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8.  Progressive non-fluent aphasia is associated with hypometabolism centred on the left anterior insula.

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Review 9.  Frontotemporal dementia.

Authors:  Jonathan A Knibb; Christopher M Kipps; John R Hodges
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  44 in total

1.  Words and objects at the tip of the left temporal lobe in primary progressive aphasia.

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2.  The Wernicke conundrum and the anatomy of language comprehension in primary progressive aphasia.

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3.  Bilingualism in Primary Progressive Aphasia: A Retrospective Study on Clinical and Language Characteristics.

Authors:  Ana S Costa; Regina Jokel; Alberto Villarejo; Sara Llamas-Velasco; Kimiko Domoto-Reilley; Jennifer Wojtala; Kathrin Reetz; Álvaro Machado
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Review 4.  Primary progressive aphasia and the evolving neurology of the language network.

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5.  Verbal Neuropsychological Functions in Aphasia: An Integrative Model.

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Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2015-12

6.  Neurology of anomia in the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia.

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7.  Progranulin-associated primary progressive aphasia: a distinct phenotype?

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8.  Abnormal laughter-like vocalisations replacing speech in primary progressive aphasia.

Authors:  Jonathan D Rohrer; Jason D Warren; Martin N Rossor
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9.  Non-verbal sound processing in the primary progressive aphasias.

Authors:  Johanna C Goll; Sebastian J Crutch; Jenny H Y Loo; Jonathan D Rohrer; Chris Frost; Doris-Eva Bamiou; Jason D Warren
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2009-10-01       Impact factor: 13.501

10.  Progressive logopenic/phonological aphasia: erosion of the language network.

Authors:  Jonathan D Rohrer; Gerard R Ridgway; Sebastian J Crutch; Julia Hailstone; Johanna C Goll; Matthew J Clarkson; Simon Mead; Jonathan Beck; Cath Mummery; Sebastien Ourselin; Elizabeth K Warrington; Martin N Rossor; Jason D Warren
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-08-11       Impact factor: 6.556

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