Apraxia of speech with phonological alexia and agraphia following resection of the left middle precentral gyrus: illustrative case

Autor: Deborah F. Levy, Alexander B. Silva, Terri L. Scott, Jessie R. Liu, Sarah Harper, Lingyun Zhao, Patrick W. Hullett, Garret Kurteff, Stephen M. Wilson, Matthew K. Leonard, Edward F. Chang
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Neurosurgery: Case Lessons. 5
ISSN: 2694-1902
Popis: BACKGROUND Apraxia of speech is a disorder of speech-motor planning in which articulation is effortful and error-prone despite normal strength of the articulators. Phonological alexia and agraphia are disorders of reading and writing disproportionately affecting unfamiliar words. These disorders are almost always accompanied by aphasia. OBSERVATIONS A 36-year-old woman underwent resection of a grade IV astrocytoma based in the left middle precentral gyrus, including a cortical site associated with speech arrest during electrocortical stimulation mapping. Following surgery, she exhibited moderate apraxia of speech and difficulty with reading and spelling, both of which improved but persisted 6 months after surgery. A battery of speech and language assessments was administered, revealing preserved comprehension, naming, cognition, and orofacial praxis, with largely isolated deficits in speech-motor planning and the spelling and reading of nonwords. LESSONS This case describes a specific constellation of speech-motor and written language symptoms—apraxia of speech, phonological agraphia, and phonological alexia in the absence of aphasia—which the authors theorize may be attributable to disruption of a single process of “motor-phonological sequencing.” The middle precentral gyrus may play an important role in the planning of motorically complex phonological sequences for production, independent of output modality.
Databáze: OpenAIRE