The right uncinate fasciculus supports verbal short-term memory in aphasia

Author:

Olivé Guillem,Peñaloza Claudia,Vaquero Lucía,Laine Matti,Martin Nadine,Rodriguez-Fornells Antoni

Abstract

AbstractVerbal short-term memory (STM) deficits are associated with language processing impairments in people with aphasia. Importantly, the integrity of STM can predict word learning ability and anomia therapy gains in aphasia. While the recruitment of perilesional and contralesional homologous brain regions has been proposed as a possible mechanism for aphasia recovery, little is known about the white-matter pathways that support verbal STM in post-stroke aphasia. Here, we investigated the relationships between the language-related white matter tracts and verbal STM ability in aphasia. Nineteen participants with post-stroke chronic aphasia completed a subset of verbal STM subtests of the TALSA battery including nonword repetition (phonological STM), pointing span (lexical-semantic STM without language output) and repetition span tasks (lexical-semantic STM with language output). Using a manual deterministic tractography approach, we investigated the micro- and macrostructural properties of the structural language network. Next, we assessed the relationships between individually extracted tract values and verbal STM scores. We found significant correlations between volume measures of the right Uncinate Fasciculus and all three verbal STM scores, with the association between the right UF volume and nonword repetition being the strongest one. These findings suggest that the integrity of the right UF is associated with phonological and lexical-semantic verbal STM ability in aphasia and highlight the potential compensatory role of right-sided ventral white matter language tracts in supporting verbal STM after aphasia-inducing left hemisphere insult.

Funder

Government of Andorra

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Madrid's Region Consejería de Educación, Universidades, Ciencia y Portavocía

Academy of Finland

National Institutes of Health

Language Learning Small Grants Research Program

Universitat de Barcelona

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Histology,General Neuroscience,Anatomy

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