1. The time course of neurolinguistic and neuropsychological symptoms in three cases of logopenic primary progressive aphasia
- Author
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Martina Minnerop, Katrin Amunts, Ferdinand Binkofski, Stephanie Schulte, Walter Huber, Marion Grande, Yosef Grodzinsky, Stefan Heim, Peter Pieperhoff, Louise Etcheverry, Martin Südmeyer, and Barbara Seidel
- Subjects
Male ,Longitudinal study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Audiology ,Verbal learning ,Apraxia ,Speech Disorders ,Developmental psychology ,Primary progressive aphasia ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Attention ,Longitudinal Studies ,Aged ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Neuropsychology ,Linguistics ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Verbal Learning ,medicine.disease ,Aphasia, Primary Progressive ,Disease Progression ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cognition Disorders ,Comprehension ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a rare clinical dementia syndrome affecting predominantly language abilities. Word-finding difficulties and comprehension deficits despite relatively preserved cognitive functions are characteristic symptoms during the first two years, and distinguish PPA from other dementia types like Alzheimer's disease. However, the dynamics of changes in language and non-linguistic abilities are not well understood. Most studies on progression used cross-sectional designs, which provide only limited insight into the course of the disease. Here we report the results of a longitudinal study in three cases of logopenic PPA over a period of 18 months, with exemplary longitudinal data from one patient even over 46 months. A comprehensive battery of neurolinguistic and neuropsychological tests was applied four times at intervals of six months. Over this period, deterioration of verbal abilities such as picture naming, story retelling, and semantic word recall was found, and the individual decline was quantified and compared between the three patients. Furthermore, decrease in non-verbal skills such as divided attention and increasing apraxia was observed in all three patients. In addition, inter-subject variability in the progression with different focuses was observed, with one patient developing a non-fluent PPA variant. The longitudinal, multivariate investigation of logopenic PPA thus provides novel insights into the progressive deterioration of verbal as well as non-verbal abilities. These deficits may further interact and thus form a multi-causal basis for the patients' problems in every-day life which need to be considered when planning individually targeted intervention in PPA.
- Published
- 2012
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