Delayed Recall Deficits in Aphasic Stroke Patients

Author:

Bayles Kathryn A.1,Tomoeda Cheryl K.1

Affiliation:

1. University of Arizona, Tucson

Abstract

In a comparative study of the performance of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), aphasia resulting from stroke, and normal elders on a variety of neuropsychological tasks, 3 aphasic patients performed similarly to AD patients in the delayed recall of verbal material. The memory deficit of these aphasic patients raised the question of incipient dementia because memory impairment is the hallmark characteristic of AD. However, when the performance profiles of the aphasic patients on all four memory measures administered in the study were compared to those of AD patients, differences made the presence of dementia unlikely. Nonetheless, the possibility remained that a deficit in delayed free recall might be the primordial symptom of dementia. Therefore, the four memory tasks were readministered to the 3 aphasic patients 2 years later, and intergroup performance comparisons again were made. The performance profiles of the aphasic patients obtained 2 years later were superior to and distinct from the AD patients, confirming the absence of dementia at Test Time 1.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology

Reference17 articles.

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2. Differentiating Alzheimer's patients from the normal elderly and stroke patients with aphasia;BAYLES K. A.;Journalof Speech and HearingDisorders,1989

3. BAYLES K. A. & KASZNIAK A. W. (1987). Communication and cognition in normal aging and dementia. San Diego CA: College-Hill Press/Little Brown & Co.

4. Verbal retention deficits in aphasic and amnesic patients

5. Aphasic and amnesic patients' verbal vs. nonverbal retentive abilities;CERMAK L. S.;Cortex,1978

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