Correlations of glucose metabolism and structural damage to language function in aphasia |
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Authors: | E. Jeffrey Metter Walter H. Riege Wayne R. Hanson Lawrence R. Camras Michael E. Phelps David E. Kuhl |
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Affiliation: | 1. Veterans Administration Medical Center, Sepulveda, USA;2. School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
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Abstract: | Studies of aphasic patients using [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron computed tomographs have shown areas of metabolic depression in the left hemisphere larger than the area of infarction noted on CT. To evaluate these metabolic differences in relationship to language abnormalities, 11 patients had metabolic scans, CT, and were administered the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Battery and the Porch Index of Communicative Ability. Correlation analyses were computed between metabolic, CT, and language data. CT demonstrated reliable correlations of speaking, oral reading, and repetition to Wernicke' area, consistent with current anatomic language models, while metabolic data from areas posterior, inferior, and superior to the traditional Wernicke's area and the head of the caudate nucleus also had reliable correlations with aphasic language function. The utilization of both structural and metabolic brain measures may improve our understanding of the anatomy of language as related to aphasia. |
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Keywords: | Send correspondence to E. Jeffrey Metter Veterans Administration Hospital 16111 Plummer St. Sepulveda CA 91343. |
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