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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (Parkinson's disease)
63,064 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Speech and language alterations were assessed in 51 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and 10 patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT). Thirty-five of the PD patients had no evidence of intellectual impairment on a conventional mental status questionnaire and 16 of the PD patients had dementia syndromes of comparable severity to the DAT patients. DAT produced significantly greater language disturbances, including anomia, decreased information content of spontaneous speech, and diminished word list generation. PD patients had significantly decreased phrase length, impaired speech melody, dysarthria, and agraphia. The results suggest that the dementia of PD is distinguishable from that of DAT:PD patients have prominent motor speech abnormalities, whereas DAT patients exhibit more profound language alterations.
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PMID:Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease: comparison of speech and language alterations. 336 62

Articulatory disturbances are frequently described in Parkinson disease, but language disorders are not. We have occasionally encountered parkinsonian patients with word-finding difficulty unrelated to memory loss, intellectual impairment, or dysarthria. To examine this, 22 medically stable parkinsonian patients were given the vocabulary subtest of the WAIS, the Boston Naming Test, measures of verbal fluency, and sentence repetition. Signs and symptoms of parkinsonism were rated. WAIS vocabulary subtest scores were above the mean for normal aged subjects, but confrontation naming was one standard deviation below norms for age and education. Naming was facilitated by cues in most patients. Only sentence repetition correlated with dysarthria. Category naming was impaired and correlated significantly with the severity of parkinsonism, especially bradykinesia. This suggests that a type of anomia may occur in Parkinson disease. it shares the clinical characteristics of the "tip-of-the-tongue" phenomenon and "word production anomia" seen in some aphasics.
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PMID:"Tip-of-the-tongue" phenomenon in Parkinson disease. 720 Feb 16

We studied 49 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) by a neuropsychological battery examining the temporo-spatial orientation, short-term memory, comprehension, non-verbal intelligence, long-term memory and anomia and the Auditory Event-Related Potentials. In the patients the latencies of the N100 and N200 waves were prolonged and the amplitude of the P300 wave was reduced compared with controls. No difference was found in the ERP of patients with and without cognitive deficits. Equally, no correlation was found between the ERP, the cognitive impairment, the length or the severity of the disease evaluated by Hoehn-Yahr's and Webster's scales.
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PMID:Auditory event-related potentials in Parkinson's disease. 940 29

It is known that Parkinson's disease is often accompanied by a motor speech disorder, which results in impaired communication. However, people with Parkinson's disease may also have impaired word retrieval (anomia) and other communicative problems, which have a negative impact on their ability to participate in conversations with family as well as healthcare staff. The aim of the present study was to explore effects of impaired speech and language on communication and how this is managed by people with Parkinson's disease and their spouses. Using a qualitative method based on Conversation Analysis, in-depth analyses were performed on natural conversational interaction in five dyads including elderly men who were at different stages of Parkinson's disease. The findings showed that the motor speech disorder in combination with word retrieval difficulties and adaptations, such as using communication strategies, may result in atypical utterances that are difficult for communication partners to understand. The coexistence of several communication problems compounds the difficulties faced in conversations and individuals with Parkinson's disease are often dependent on cooperation with their communication partner to make themselves understood.
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PMID:Multifaceted Communication Problems in Everyday Conversations Involving People with Parkinson's Disease. 2894 14