Investigating Aphasia Recovery: Demographic and Clinical Factors

Author:

Papageorgiou Georgios1,Kasselimis Dimitrios12ORCID,Angelopoulou Georgia1,Laskaris Nikolaos13ORCID,Tsolakopoulos Dimitrios1,Velonakis Georgios4ORCID,Tountopoulou Argyro5ORCID,Vassilopoulou Sophia5,Potagas Constantin1

Affiliation:

1. Neuropsychology & Language Disorders Unit, 1st Neurology Department, Eginition Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11528 Athens, Greece

2. Department of Psychology, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, 17671 Athens, Greece

3. Department of Industrial Design and Production Engineering, School of Engineering, University of West Attica, 12241 Athens, Greece

4. 2nd Department of Radiology, General University Hospital “Attikon”, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 15772 Athens, Greece

5. Stroke Unit, 1st Department of Neurology, Eginition Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 15772 Athens, Greece

Abstract

Post-stroke language recovery remains one of the main unresolved topics in the field of aphasia. In recent years, there have been efforts to identify specific factors that could potentially lead to improved language recovery. However, the exact relationship between the recovery of particular language functions and possible predictors, such as demographic or lesion variables, is yet to be fully understood. In the present study, we attempted to investigate such relationships in 42 patients with aphasia after left hemisphere stroke, focusing on three language domains: auditory comprehension, naming and speech fluency. Structural imaging data were also obtained for the identification of the lesion sites. According to our findings, patients demonstrated an overall improvement in all three language domains, while no demographic factor significantly contributed to aphasia recovery. Interestingly, specific lesion loci seemed to have a differential effect on language performance, depending on the time of testing (i.e., acute/subacute vs. chronic phase). We argue that this variability concerning lesion–deficit associations reflects the dynamic nature of aphasia and further discuss possible explanations in the framework of neuroplastic changes during aphasia recovery.

Funder

Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

Reference101 articles.

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