Titre du document

Task-dependent changes in brain activation following therapy for nonfluent aphasia: Discussion of two individual cases

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Nom du corpus

Ortho

Auteur(s)
  • LEORA R. CHERNEY 1
  • STEVEN L. SMALL 2
Affiliation(s)
  • Center for Aphasia Research, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
  • The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
Langue(s) du document
Anglais
Revue

Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society

Éditeur
Cambridge
Année de publication
2006
Type de publication
Journal
Type de document
Research-article
Résumé

The complex process of cortical reorganization of language-related brain regions during recovery from aphasia and the effects of therapeutic interventions on brain systems are poorly understood. We studied two patients with chronic aphasia and compared their functional neuroanatomical responses to a younger control group on two tasks, an oral-reading task involving overt speech and a “passive” audiovisual story-comprehension task. Following identical therapy, we re-examined behavioral (language) and functional neuroanatomical changes using the same functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) tasks. We hypothesized that better recovery would be associated with brain activation patterns more closely resembling healthy controls, whereas positive responses to language treatment would be associated with increased activity in undamaged left perisylvian areas and/or right-hemisphere areas homologous to the damaged regions. For the participant with a frontal lesion who was most responsive to therapy, brain activation increased in the right hemisphere during oral-reading, but decreased bilaterally in most regions on story-comprehension. The other participant with a temporal–parietal lesion showed decreased activation, particularly in the right hemisphere, during oral-reading but increased activation bilaterally on story-comprehension. Results highlight individual variability following language therapy, with brain activation changes depending on lesion site and size, language skill, type of intervention, and the nature of the fMRI task. (JINS, 2006, 12, 828–842.)

Mots-clés d'auteur
  • Aphasia
  • Neuroimaging
  • fMRI
  • Rehabilitation
  • Recovery
  • Language therapy
Catégories INIST
  • 1 - sciences humaines et sociales
Score qualité du texte
9.484
Version PDF
1.3
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Nom du fichier dans la ressource
ortho-ang_0150
ark:/67375/6GQ-BFWXDBD2-F
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