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Query: UMLS:C0003635 (
apraxia
)
2,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 68-year-old right-handed woman was admitted to Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital because of slowly progressive dysarthria and writing disability over 2-year period. On admission, severe dysarthria was observed, but no dysphagia. The dysarthria mostly resembled a type of pseudobulbar palsy, although it was associated with effortful speech production. An oro-facial
apraxia
was also found. She could name objects, and could understand spoken words correctly. Examination using the Western Aphasia Battery showed diminution of word fluency, impaired repetition and perseveration and writing errors. On the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-R verbal IQ was 100 and performance IQ was 87. These scores did not suggest any significant degree of general intellectual deterioration. Wisconsin card sorting test disclosed mild frontal dysfunction. Magnetic resonance imaging showed cortical atrophy in the bilateral frontal and temporal lobes. Measurements of regional cerebral metabolic rate by 18F-
FDG
-PET demonstrated decreased uptake in the latero-dorso-inferior area of the bilateral frontal lobes, especially on the left side. The present case showed slowly progressive dysarthria and progressive aphasia without generalized dementia, and without typical aphasia. These symptoms are speculated to be related to the atrophy in the bilateral frontal and temporal lobes shown by MRI and the decreased metabolic rate in the left dominant bilateral frontal lobes on PET study. The pathologic process responsible for these lesions remains obscure.
...
PMID:[Slowly progressive dysarthria and impaired language function--a case report]. 128 97
We reported a 67-year-old male, who suffered from
apraxia
and amnesia for 2 years and for muscle rigidity of right extremities for a year. Neurological examination revealed dysarthria, dysphagia, marked dystonia of right arm, hyperreflexia of all limbs and ataxic gait. He also had dementia and many other higher cortical dysfunction mostly due to left hemisphere damage. No impairment of eye movement was disclosed. Brain MRI as well as CT showed the significant brain atrophy in the left parieto-occipital region. A degenerative atrophy was suspected by 123I-IMP-SPECT and 18F-
FDG
-PET. By
FDG
-PET, the decrease of cerebral blood flow and glucose metabolism was detected not only affected unilateral cerebral cortex including primary motor area but ipsilateral basal ganglia and thalamus. Although, it is difficult to distinguish clinically CBD from atypical case of Alzheimer's disease, we speculated that in early stage of dementia, significant unilateral hypoperfusion and hypometabolism of basal ganglia and thalamus is characteristic of CBD.
...
PMID:[Clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration (CBD)]. 833 74
Two cases of aphasia after right hemispheric stroke in right handed patients are described. The first patient had a severe mixed transcortical aphasia,
apraxia
and neglect after a lesion involving the right lenticular nucleus and periventricular white matter; aphasia was still present after three months. The second patient had a mild, transient fluent aphasia after a small right hemispheric periventricular lesion. Studies with [18F]
FDG
and positron emission tomography (PET) showed functional depression extending to the structurally unaffected left hemisphere in both patients in the acute stage. After three months, in the patient with persistent aphasia, metabolism was still reduced in the right hemisphere, with some recovery of hypometabolism on the left, while metabolic values had returned to normal in the patient with full language recovery. A close parallelism between glucose metabolism and clinical course in crossed aphasia is shown, as well as the presence of a functional involvement of the structurally unaffected left hemisphere in the acute stage.
...
PMID:Crossed aphasia: a PET follow up study of two cases. 820 63
We report three cases of clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration: a 63-year-old male, a 63-year-old female and a 62-year-old female. All the three patients exhibited asymmetric limb-kinetic
apraxia
and extrapyramidal signs. Neuroimaging studies with MRI, 123I-IMP SPECT and
FDG
-PET were performed in each of the three cases and FDOPA-PET was performed in patient 1. MRI analysis showed asymmetric cortical atrophy, especially in the parietal cortex, in all the three cases. 123I-IMP SPECT analysis revealed asymmetric reduction of the cerebral blood flow, in accordance with the MRI findings.
FDG
-PET analysis showed marked asymmetric reduction (> or = 10%) of cerebral metabolic rates for glucose (CMRGlc) in the lateral frontal cortex, lateral posterior frontal cortex and primary motor and sensory cortex in all the patients, although the asymmetry in the thalamus which had been described as a characteristic CBD finding in previous reports was not observed in any of the patients in our study. FDOPA-PET analysis revealed reduction of uptake in both the putamen and caudate nucleus, predominantly in the caudate nucleus, which suggests that the FDOPA-PET findings correlate with the extrapyramidal signs observed in the case of the 63-year-old male.
...
PMID:[Three cases of clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration--neuroimaging studies with MRI, SPECT and PET]. 872 Mar 26
A 69-year-old women was admitted to Tokyo Medical and Dental University Hospital because of slowly progressive difficulty in speech production over 8-years. On admission, her spontaneous speech was non-fluent, limited to one-syllable utterance, and severely efforty. But her visual and auditory comprehension was preserved. There was no significant general intellectual deterioration. Severe buccofacial
apraxia
, but no swallowing was observed. So we considered her difficulty in speech as aphemia. Three-dimensionally reconstructed surface MR image clearly showed severe atrophy in the posterior part of the left inferior frontal gyrus and the lower part of the left pre-central gyrus. The
FDG
-PET demonstrated a focal hypometabolism in the same region. The lesion in this area was suggested to be a cause of speech production difficulty in this case.
...
PMID:[Slowly progressive aphemia--a case report]. 1007 30
A 83-year-old right handed man developed nurturing syndrome and geographical mislocation (misidentification of places) as a result of dementia with Lewy bodies. He showed parkinsonism, fluctuating cognition, repeated falls, systematic delusions (delusional jealousy with vivid feeling of witness), rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder, and mild dementia. His brain MRI showed atrophy of bilateral temporal tips and amygdala. A
FDG
-PET showed decrease of glucose metabolism in right frontal lobe and left temporo-parietal areas. He showed constructional disability, frontal lobe dysfunction, mild deterioration of immediate memory, mild anterograde amnesia, and retrograde amnesia for recent events. Aphasia,
apraxia
, agnosia, confabulation, or deterioration of facial perception was not noted. He could state the genealogy, ages and recent whereabouts of his relatives, and could state the locations and geographical relationships of his neighboring buildings. He insisted that his father's existence, who had died 52 years ago, although he talked about the episode of his death just before. One month after having a dream that his sick-room was in a fictitious branch of our hospital which located in his neighboring temple, he developed a delusion that his ward was actually in the temple. The former disorder seems to correspond to the nurturing syndrome described by Venneri et al. (2000), and the latter one suggested us that his dream was causally involved in the formation of geographical mis-localization. After Ramachandran's explanation for Capgras' syndrome, we hypothesized that mis-arousal of familiarity evoked by visual perception or memory was attributable to the dysfunction of amygdala, and failure of consistency-checking was caused by the dysfunction of the right frontal lobe.
...
PMID:[A case of probable dementia with Lewy bodies presenting with geographic mislocation and nurturing syndrome]. 1457 40
The role of biomarkers in predicting pathological findings in the frontotemporal dementia (FTD) clinical spectrum disorders is still being explored. We present comprehensive, prospective longitudinal data for a 66 year old, right-handed female who met current criteria for the nonfluent/agrammatic variant of primary progressive aphasia (nfvPPA). She first presented with a 3-year history of progressive speech and language impairment mainly characterized by severe
apraxia
of speech. Neuropsychological and general motor functions remained relatively spared throughout the clinical course. Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) showed selective cortical atrophy of the left posterior inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and underlying insula that worsened over time, extending along the left premotor strip. Five years after her first evaluation, she developed mild memory impairment and underwent PET-
FDG
and PiB scans that showed left frontal hypometabolism and cortical amyloidosis. Three years later (11 years from first symptom), post-mortem histopathological evaluation revealed Pick's disease, with severe degeneration of left IFG, mid-insula, and precentral gyrus. Alzheimer's disease (AD) (CERAD frequent/Braak Stage V) was also detected. This patient demonstrates that biomarkers indicating brain amyloidosis should not be considered conclusive evidence that AD pathology accounts for a typical FTD clinical/anatomical syndrome.
...
PMID:Nonfluent/agrammatic PPA with in-vivo cortical amyloidosis and Pick's disease pathology. 2271 4
We present the longitudinal neurolinguistic, neuropsychological and neurologic follow-up of a 64 y.o. right-handed woman, who developed progressive
apraxia
of speech (PAOS), followed by peripheral agraphia then a left corticobasal syndrome (CBS). Neuroimaging (CT, MRI and
FDG
-PET) unequivocally showed progressive right hemispheric atrophy and hypometabolism. This particular evolution first confirms that PAOS is a phenotype of probable corticobasal degeneration (CBD). More importantly, this case underpins the neural organisation of motor planning processing in relation with speech, as well as graphic and limb praxis impairments, and constitutes a rare example of crossed-PAOS.
...
PMID:Progressive crossed-apraxia of speech as a first manifestation of a probable corticobasal degeneration. 2288 9
Brain metastases arise in 10%-40% of all cancer patients. Up to one third of the patients do not have previous cancer history. We report a case of a 67-years-old male patient who presented with confusion, tremor, and
apraxia
. A brain MRI revealed an isolated right temporal lobe lesion. A thorax-abdomen-pelvis CT scan showed no primary lesion. The patient underwent a craniotomy with gross-total resection. Histopathology revealed an intestinal-type adenocarcinoma. A colonoscopy found no primary lesion, but a PET-CT scan showed elevated
FDG
uptake in the appendiceal nodule. A right hemicolectomy was performed, and the specimen showed a moderately differentiated mucinous appendiceal adenocarcinoma. Whole brain radiotherapy was administrated. A subsequent thorax-abdomen CT scan revealed multiple lung and hepatic metastasis. Seven months later, the patient died of disease progression. In cases of undiagnosed primary lesions, patients present in better general condition, but overall survival does not change. Eventual identification of the primary tumor does not affect survival. PET/CT might be a helpful tool in detecting lesions of the appendiceal region. To the best of our knowledge, such a case was never reported in the literature, and an appendiceal malignancy should be suspected in patients with brain metastasis from an undiagnosed primary tumor.
...
PMID:Cerebral metastasis from a previously undiagnosed appendiceal adenocarcinoma. 2319
The purpose of this study was to identify the clinical, [(18)F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and amyloid-PET findings in a large cohort of posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) patients, to examine the neural correlates of the classic features of PCA, and to better understand the features associated with early PCA. We prospectively recruited 25 patients who presented to the Mayo Clinic between March 2013 and August 2014 and met diagnostic criteria for PCA. All patients underwent a standardized set of tests and amyloid imaging with [(11)C] Pittsburg compound B (PiB). Seventeen (68 %) underwent
FDG
-PET scanning. We divided the cohort at the median disease duration of 4 years in order to assess clinical and
FDG
-PET correlates of early PCA (n = 13). The most common clinical features were simultanagnosia (92 %), dysgraphia (68 %), poly-mini-myoclonus (64 %) and oculomotor
apraxia
(56.5 %). On
FDG
-PET, hypometabolism was observed bilaterally in the lateral and medial parietal and occipital lobes. Simultanagnosia was associated with hypometabolism in the right occipital lobe and posterior cingulum, optic ataxia with hypometabolism in left occipital lobe, and oculomotor
apraxia
with hypometabolism in the left parietal lobe and posterior cingulate gyrus. All 25 PCA patients were amyloid positive. Simultanagnosia was the only feature present in 85 % of early PCA patients. The syndrome of PCA is associated with posterior hemisphere hypometabolism and with amyloid deposition. Many of the classic features of PCA show associated focal, but not widespread, areas of involvement of these posterior hemispheric regions. Simultanagnosia appears to be the most common and hence sensitive feature of early PCA.
...
PMID:Clinical, FDG and amyloid PET imaging in posterior cortical atrophy. 2586 83
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