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Stark C, Gupta JD, Austin T, Palacios E, Neitzschman H. Radiology case of the month. Progressive slurring of speech and difficulty reading in a 62-year-old male. Final diagnosis: Metastatic small cell cancer of the prostate gland. J La State Med Soc 2014; 166:38-40. [PMID: 25075510] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 06/03/2023]
Abstract
A 62-year-old male with controlled hypertension, coronary artery disease, and borderline diabetes presented to the emergency room after experiencing a gradual one-month progression of slurring of speech and difficulty reading. The patient maintained his vital signs throughout his ambulance ride to the hospital and was clinically stable at time of arrival to the emergency department.
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Affiliation(s)
- Chris Stark
- Third-year Medical Student at Tulane School of Medicine in New Orleans
| | - Jagan D Gupta
- Second-year Radiology Resident at Tulane School of Medicine in New Orleans
| | - Tracy Austin
- Intern at Tulane School of Medicine in New Orleans
| | - Enrique Palacios
- Clinical Professor of Radiology at Tulane School of Medicine in New Orleans
| | - Harold Neitzschman
- Professor of Radiology and Chairman of the Department of Radiology at Tulane School of Medicine in New Orleans
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Abstract
Three patients with left splenial lesions made paralexic errors restricted to the left end of words. Errors appeared more frequently when a correct response was highly dependent on the initial letter of the stimulus. One patient had full visual fields with hemialexia affecting the left visual field. The other two patients had complete right hemianopia. We attribute left-sided reading errors in the hemianopic patients to a retinotopically restricted disconnection pattern that selectively disrupts transfer of information originating from the peripheral left visual field. Functional resistance of the more numerous transcallosal projections representing visual field adjacent to the vertical meridian may account for such a pattern. The emergence of positional reading errors from retinotopically restricted left hemifield disconnection suggests that callosal information transfer during normal reading may primarily involve elemental sensory rather than lexical/semantic information.
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Affiliation(s)
- J R Binder
- Department of Neurology, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York
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Freedman L, Selchen DH, Black SE, Kaplan R, Garnett ES, Nahmias C. Posterior cortical dementia with alexia: neurobehavioural, MRI, and PET findings. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1991; 54:443-8. [PMID: 1865209 PMCID: PMC488546 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp.54.5.443] [Citation(s) in RCA: 59] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/29/2022]
Abstract
A progressive disorder of relatively focal but asymmetric biposterior dysfunction is described in a 54 year old right handed male. Initial clinical features included letter-by-letter alexia, visual anomia, acalculia, mild agraphia, constructional apraxia, and visuospatial compromise. Serial testing demonstrated relentless deterioration with additional development of transcortical sensory aphasia, Gerstmann's tetrad, and severe visuoperceptual impairment. Amnesia was not an early clinical feature. Judgment, personality, insight, and awareness remained preserved throughout most of the clinical course. Extinction in the right visual field to bilateral stimulation was the sole neurological abnormality. Early CT was normal and late MRI showed asymmetrical bioccipitoparietal atrophy with greater involvement of the left hemisphere. Results from positron emission tomography (PET) showed bilaterally asymmetric (left greater than right) occipitotemporoparietal hypometabolism. The metabolic decrement was strikingly asymmetric with a 50% reduction in glucose consumption confined to the left occipital cortex. The picture of occipitotemporoparietal compromise verified by MRI, PET, and neurobehavioural testing would be unusual for such degenerative dementias as Alzheimer's (AD) and Pick's disease, although atypical AD with predominant occipital lobe involvement cannot be excluded. This case supports the concepts of posterior cortical dementia (PCD) as a clinically distinct entity and for the first time documents its corresponding metabolic deficit using PET.
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Affiliation(s)
- L Freedman
- Department of Psychology, Mississauga Hospital, Ontario, Canada
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Abstract
A case of intermittent alexia, sometimes accompanied by severe dysgraphia and sometimes by mild dysgraphia, which had a probable migrainous origin, is described. On some occasions the patient could write to dictation, although with many errors, while unable to read words or letters. On other occasions the patient's writing to dictation was seriously disordered in terms of content and the letters were produced clumsily. Reading of numbers, colour vision and colour naming were normal although impairments on right-left orientation and visual short term memory were present and a mild finger agnosia was apparent. Blood flow scans (SPECT) taken under normal and alexic conditions support the view that the disturbance had a vascular origin.
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Affiliation(s)
- D M Parker
- Department of Psychology, University of Aberdeen
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Abstract
Even though the PET study revealed a total infarct in the territory of the left PCA in our 3 cases of pure alexia, it is still obscure which part of the left occipital lobe is most closely associated with the occurrence of the pure alexia. In order to elucidate the intralobar localization of the pure alexia, it is needed to have an ideal case who shows an pure alexia due to the localized lesion within the left occipital lobe. Furthermore, high-resolution PET scanner will circumvent the problem in detecting the metabolism and blood flow in the corpus callosum which plays an important role in the pathogenesis. We have shown that the occlusion of the right PCA also produced a left unilateral agnosia which is one of the common neurological signs in the right MCA infarction. To tell whether the responsible lesion for the unilateral spatial agnosia differs between the PCA occlusion and the MCA occlusion, the correlation study should be carried out in a greater number of the subjects. Two distinctive neuropsychological manifestations, cerebral color blindness and prosopagnosia, have been considered to be produced by the bilateral occipital lesion. The PET studies disclosed reduction of blood flow and oxygen metabolism in both occipital lobes in our particular patient who exhibited cerebral color blindness and prosopagnosia.
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Affiliation(s)
- K Tagawa
- Division of Neurology, Research Institute for Brain and Blood Vessels, Akita
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Affiliation(s)
- I C Naranjo
- Department of Neurology, Hospital General de Valencia, Spain
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Mochizuki H, Ohtomo R. Pure alexia in Japanese and agraphia without alexia in kanji. The ability dissociation between reading and writing in kanji vs kana. Arch Neurol 1988; 45:1157-9. [PMID: 3178534 DOI: 10.1001/archneur.1988.00520340111020] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/04/2023]
Abstract
A 60-year-old right-handed Japanese man with infarction of the left occipital lobe and inferior temporal gyrus initially showed pure alexia in kana and kanji. Later, though pure alexia in kana persisted, his kanji reading improved markedly, but with little improvement of kanji writing. We speculate that different pathways are involved in kanji reading and writing. Wernicke's area and its surrounding left middle temporal lobe might play the most important role for kanji reading when visual information is transmitted by any pathway. The pathway from Wernicke's area to the left occipital lobe via the middle and inferior temporal pathway may be indispensable for kanji writing. We postulate "agraphia without alexia in kanji" due to left inferior temporal subcortical damage.
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Affiliation(s)
- H Mochizuki
- Department of Neurology, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan
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Abstract
We report resolving metabolic abnormalities corresponding to clinical improvement in a patient with pure alexia secondary to acute cerebral infarction. Local cerebral glucose metabolism (lCMRgl) was measured with positron emission tomography (PET) using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) close to ictus and 4 1/2 months later. Serial CTs and a subsequent MRI demonstrated small, unchanging left-hemispheric lesions involving the area of the lateral geniculate body and the splenium of the corpus callosum. PET demonstrated the evolution of the metabolic abnormality resulting from intrahemispheric (lateral geniculate) and interhemispheric (splenium) disconnection in the absence of occipital lobe infarction. This case illustrates that cerebral disconnection can result in the syndrome of pure alexia. The factors accounting for focal hypometabolism in the absence of cerebral infarction are discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- F L Silver
- Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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Abstract
Four patients with alexia without agraphia had CT lesions which correlated with the clinical findings. All lesions were vascular; two were spontaneous intracerebral hematomas and two were ischemic infarctions in the posterior cerebral artery distribution. The lesions were located in the posterior portion of the dominant hemisphere. The location of the lesion correlated with the presence or absence of visual field abnormalities.
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Abstract
The behavioral and anatomic correlates of pure alexia were analyzed in 16 patients. Right homonymous hemianopia failed to appear in three patients, who had right achromatopsia instead. Color anomia and unilateral optic ataxia were seen in six patients. Memory defects were found in two patients. Visual agnosia was noted in two. No patient had visual disorientation. The crucial anatomic correlate of alexia was a lesion of the paraventricular white matter of the left occipital lobe, capable of compromising both interhemispheric and intrahemispheric visual pathways. The lesion associated with color anomia was in the mesial occipitotemporal junction of the left hemisphere.
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Abstract
In an unselected group of aphasics those patients who produced semantic paralexias had significantly larger lesions than those without semantic paralexias. The possible mechanisms of the release of "alternative" right hemisphere reading from left hemisphere control are discussed.
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Abstract
Syntactic alexia is the inability to comprehend graphically presented sentences when the meaning depends on syntax. Although previously described in association with Broca's aphasia and attributed solely to the frontal lobe portion of the lesions, syntactic alexia has not been reported to accompany conduction aphasia. We studied three patients who had conduction aphasia from temporoparietal lesions and syntactic alexia. None of them had lesions in Broca's area. Broca's aphasics and our patients with conduction aphasia have a syntactic comprehension disturbance. Since Broca's aphasics and our patients have lesions that may extend into the supramarginal gyrus, we postulate that this area may be critical for comprehending syntax.
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Demeurisse G, Patte M, Derouck M, Verhas M, Ganty C. [A case of alexia without agraphia. Clinical and CBF study (author's transl)]. Rev Med Brux 1981; 2:933-8. [PMID: 7344029] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/24/2023]
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Abstract
In two cases of pure alexia with computed tomography (CT) evidence of lesions in the left occipital lobe, the left hand copied letters normally, but the right hand copied defectively. The findings reinforce the disconnection theory of alexia without agraphia.
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Yokoyama K, Yamadori A, Matsuo T. [A case of pure alexia with atypical clinical features, with special reference to its color identificaion defect (author's transl)]. No To Shinkei 1980; 32:689-93. [PMID: 7407019] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/25/2023]
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Hirose G. Alexia without agraphia associated with right occipital lesion. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1978; 41:1152. [PMID: 731259 PMCID: PMC493265 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp.41.12.1152] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/24/2022]
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