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Primary Progressive Aphasias and Their Contribution to the Contemporary Knowledge About the Brain-Language Relationship
Authors:Michał Harciarek  Andrew Kertesz
Affiliation:(1) Department of Social Sciences, Division of Clinical Psychology and Neuropsychology, Institute of Psychology, University of Gdańsk, Bażyńskiego 4, 80-952 Gdańsk, Poland;(2) Department of Neurology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
Abstract:Primary progressive aphasia (PPA), typically resulting from a neurodegenerative disease such as frontotemporal dementia/Pick Complex or Alzheimer’s disease, is a heterogeneous clinical condition characterized by a progressive loss of specific language functions with initial sparing of other cognitive domains. Based on the constellation of symptoms, PPA has been classified into a nonfluent, semantic, or logopenic variant. This review of the literature aims to characterize the speech and language impairment, cognition, neuroimaging, pathology, genetics, and epidemiology associated with each of these variants. Some therapeutic recommendations, theoretical implications, and directions for future research have been also provided.
Keywords:
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