Crossed Aphasia and Visuo-Spatial Neglect Following a Right Thalamic Stroke: A Case Study and Review of the Literature

Author:

De Witte Lieve1,Verhoeven Jo12,Engelborghs Sebastiaan3456,De Deyn Peter P.3456,Mariën Peter1234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics, Vrije Universtiteit Brussel, Brussel, Belgium

2. Institute of Behavioural Neuroscience, Antwerp, Belgium

3. Department of Neurology and Memory Clinic, Middelheim General Hospital (ZNA), Antwerp, Belgium

4. Laboratory of Neurochemistry and Behavior, Institute Born-Bunge Foundation, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

5. Department of Health Care Sciences, University College Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

6. Department of Nursing Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

Abstract

Crossed aphasia in dextrals (CAD) following pure subcortical lesions is rare. This study describes a right-handed patient with an ischemic lesion in the right thalamus. In the post-acute phase of the stroke, a unique combination of ‘crossed thalamic aphasia’ was found with left visuo-spatial neglect and constructional apraxia. On the basis of the criteria used in Mariën et al. [67], this case-report is the first reliable representative of vascular CAD following an isolated lesion in the right thalamus. Furthermore, this paper presents a detailed analysis of linguistic and cognitive impairments of ‘possible’ and 'reliable' subcortical CAD-cases published since 1975. Out of 25 patients with a pure subcortical lesion, nine cases were considered as ‘possibly reliable or reliable’. A review of these cases reveals that: (1) demographic data are consistent with the general findings for the entire group of vascular CAD, (2) the neurolinguistic findings do not support the data in the general CAD-population with regard to (a) the high prevalence of transcortical aphasia and (b) the tendency towards a copresence of an oral versus written language dissociation and a ‘mirror-image’ lesion-aphasia profile, (3) subcortical CAD is not a transient phenomenon, (4) the lesion-aphasia correlations are not congruent with the high incidence of anomalous cases in the general CAD-population, (5) neuropsychological impairments may accompany subcortical CAD.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Neurology,General Medicine,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology

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