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Query: UMLS:C0003635 (
apraxia
)
2,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study was designed to examine the frequency and severity of
apraxia
in patients with left- or right-hemisphere stroke in both pantomime and imitation conditions and to compare the frequency of
apraxia
in each stroke group across the three patterns of
apraxia
described in
Roy
's model (
Roy
, 1996). Ninety-nine stroke patients and 15 age-matched healthy adults performed eight transitive gestures to pantomime and to imitation. Gestural performance was quantified as accuracy on five performance dimensions; a composite score, an arithmetic combination of the five performance dimensions, was used as an index of the overall accuracy. Analyses revealed a comparable proportion of patients in each stroke group were classified as apraxic in the imitation condition, but a higher proportion of left stroke patients were apraxic in the pantomime condition. The severity of
apraxia
in each stroke group and the performance dimensions affected were, however, comparable. Analyses of the patterns of
apraxia
(pantomime alone, imitation alone or
apraxia
in both conditions) revealed a higher frequency of
apraxia
in both stroke groups for the pattern reflecting
apraxia
in both conditions, indicating that a disruption at the movement execution stage of gesture performance was most common.
...
PMID:Task demands and limb apraxia in stroke. 1104 91
The model of
apraxia
proposed by
Roy
(1996) states that three patterns of
apraxia
should be observed across pantomime and imitation conditions. In the present analysis the frequency and severity of each pattern of
apraxia
were examined in a consecutive sample of left-(LHD) and right-hemisphere-damaged (RHD) patients during the production of intransitive limb gestures. The results indicated that a significant proportion of LHD and RHD patients were selectively impaired in formulating the ideational component of intransitive limb gestures.
...
PMID:Patterns of apraxia associated with the production of intransitive limb gestures following left and right hemisphere stroke. 1152 20
Apraxia
is the loss of the ability to perform learned, skilled movements correctly, and is frequently attributed to left hemisphere damage (Heilman & Rothi, 1985). Recent work (Dumont, Ska, & Schiavetto, 1999) has shown a dissociation between transitive (tool based; e.g., hammering a nail) and intransitive (expressive/ communicative; e.g., waving goodbye) actions; however, few group studies have specifically addressed
apraxia
for intransitive gestures. The present investigation examined the frequency and severity of praxis errors related to the production of intransitive gestures in left (LHD) or right hemisphere stroke (RHD) patients in the context of
Roy
's (1996) model of limb praxis. A total of 119 consecutive stroke patients (LHD = 57, RHD = 62) and 20 healthy age-matched controls performed eight intransitive gestures to pantomime and imitation. Performance was quantified via a multi-dimensional error notation system, providing detail about specific elements of performance (e.g., location), and a composite score reflecting overall gestural accuracy. Analyses of pantomime and imitation performance revealed an equal percentage of apraxic patients in each stroke group, and the severity of
apraxia
in these groups was also equivalent. Further, analyses of the patterns of
apraxia
specified by
Roy
(1996) revealed that patients in each stroke group demonstrated selective impairments in pantomime (LHD = 38%, RHD = 42%), or imitation (LHD = 9%, RHD = 5%) conditions, whereas others demonstrated concurrent impairments (LHD = 30%, RHD = 22%) indicating that stroke to either hemisphere can selectively impair each stage in the production of an intransitive action.
...
PMID:Intransitive limb gestures and apraxia following unilateral stroke. 1177 40
The present study was designed to investigate the relationship between performance of limb gestures and the severity of Alzheimer's disease (A.D.).
Apraxia
tends to occur at later stages of A.D., and the severity of
apraxia
has been shown to vary with the severity of A.D. dementia. Participants were 19 mild (including 9 with no cognitive impairment and 10 with mild impairment) and 18 moderate A.D. patients as well as 25 controls and they were asked to pantomime (P) or imitate (both concurrent (CI) and delayed (DI)), eight transitive gestures to assess praxis performance. Results indicated that the moderate patients performed less accurately than mild and non-impaired patients, and that across all groups, the imitation conditions were performed less accurately than pantomime, relative to controls. Correlational analyses revealed that MMSE scores were correlated with all three performance conditions suggesting that impaired praxis performance may relate to more global impairment. Finally, a frequency analysis was conducted to examine whether A.D. patients showed patterns of
apraxia
as described in
Roy
's model (1996). Results indicated that A.D. patients showed greatest impairment on pattern 7 (deficits in P, DI, and CI), reflecting late-stage gesture production, with a greater frequency of moderate patients exhibiting each apraxic pattern.
...
PMID:Pantomime and imitation of limb gestures in relation to the severity of Alzheimer's disease. 1517 93
Limb
apraxia
is a neurological disorder characterized by an inability to pantomime and/or imitate gestures. It is more commonly observed after left hemisphere damage (LHD), but has also been reported after right hemisphere damage (RHD). The Conceptual-Production Systems model (
Roy
, 1996) suggests that three systems are involved in the control of purposeful movements: the conceptual, the production and the sensory/perceptual system. Depending on which system is damaged different patterns of
apraxia
are expressed. To determine the
apraxia
pattern, pantomime, delayed, and concurrent imitation tasks need to be administered, as well as conceptual tasks assessing one's knowledge of actions. Based on the model, eight patterns of
apraxia
should emerge. The purpose of this study is to determine whether these patterns are in fact observed in stroke patients and examine their frequency. If the performance of most stroke patients falls into one of the patterns, then we would have strong support for the conceptual-production model. Stroke (34 LHD and 39 RHD) patients and 27 age- and education-matched healthy controls participated in the study. Participants were assessed in four task modalities: pantomime, delayed imitation, concurrent imitation and conceptual knowledge (two tasks were used: tool naming by action and action identification). Patients were categorized as impaired on a task if they scored 2 SD below the mean performance of the controls for gesture production tasks, or below a cut-off score on the conceptual tasks. They were then classified into patterns depending on their performance on the four task modalities. Most patients (86%) fell into one of seven patterns originally predicted from the Conceptual-Production Systems model. The two most common patterns were deficits in pantomime and imitation with preserved gesture recognition and conduction
apraxia
(selective deficit in imitation). Four new patterns emerged, but mostly single cases of these were found. Overall, the study provides strong support for the Conceptual-Production Systems model.
...
PMID:An update on the Conceptual-Production Systems model of apraxia: evidence from stroke. 2263 32