| Literature DB >> 34404317 |
Boon Lead Tee1,2,3,4, Jessica Deleon1,2, Lorinda Kwan Chen Li Ying5, Bruce L Miller1, Raymond Y Lo4, Eduardo Europa1,6, Swati Sudarsan1,2, Stephanie Grasso6, Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini1,2.
Abstract
Clinical understanding of primary progressive aphasia (PPA) has been established based on English-speaking population. The lack of linguistic diversity in research hinders the diagnosis of PPA in non-English speaking patients. This case report describes the tonal and orthographic deficits of a multilingual native Cantonese-speaking woman with nonfluent/agrammatic variant PPA (nfvPPA) and progressive supranuclear palsy. Our findings suggest that Cantonese-speaking nfvPPA patients exhibit tone production impairments, tone perception deficits at the lexical selection processing, and linguistic dysgraphia errors unique to logographic script writer. These findings suggest that linguistic tailored approaches offer novel and effective tools in identifying non-English speaking PPA individuals.Entities:
Keywords: Primary progressive aphasia; logographic script; orthography; tone
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34404317 PMCID: PMC9345301 DOI: 10.1080/13554794.2021.1925302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocase ISSN: 1355-4794 Impact factor: 0.781