Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
R. Chapey (1981)
Language intervention strategies in adult aphasia
C. Frattali, B. Sonies (2000)
Speech and swallowing disturbances in corticobasal degeneration.Advances in neurology, 82
M. McNeil (2008)
Clinical Management of Sensorimotor Speech Disorders
J. Duffy (2006)
Apraxia of speech in degenerative neurologic diseaseAphasiology, 20
Y. Tsuboi, K. Josephs, B. Boeve, I. Litvan, R. Caselli, J. Caviness, R. Uitti, Allen Bott, D. Dickson (2005)
Increased tau burden in the cortices of progressive supranuclear palsy presenting with corticobasal syndromeMovement Disorders, 20
K. Abe, H. Ukita, Takehiko Yanagihara (1997)
Imaging in primary progressive aphasiaNeuroradiology, 39
Raymond Turner, L. Kenyon, J. Trojanowski, N. Gonatas, M. Grossman (1996)
Clinical, neuroimaging, and pathologic features of progressive nonfluent aphasiaAnnals of Neurology, 39
A. Kertesz, P. Mcmonagle, M. Blair, Wilda Davidson, D. Munoz (2005)
The evolution and pathology of frontotemporal dementia.Brain : a journal of neurology, 128 Pt 9
H. Schuell, J. Jenkins, J. Carroll (1962)
A factor analysis of the Minnesota test for differential diagnosis of aphasia.Journal of speech and hearing research, 5
S. Nadeau, L. Rothi, B. Crosson (2000)
Aphasia and language : theory to practice
Lisa Rapport, S. Millis, P. Bonello (1998)
Validation of the Warrington theory of visual processing and the Visual Object and Space Perception Battery.Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology, 20 2
R. Caselli, A. Windebank, R. Petersen, T. Komori, J. Parisi, H. Okazaki, E. Kokmen, R. Iverson, R. Dinapoli, N. Graff-Radford, S. Stein (1993)
Rapidly progressive aphasic dementia and motor neuron diseaseAnnals of Neurology, 33
N. Graham, T. Bak, J. Hodges (2003)
Corticobasal degeneration as a cognitive disorderMovement Disorders, 18
I. Draper (1973)
THE ASSESSMENT OF APHASIA AND RELATED DISORDERSJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 36
K. Josephs, B. Boeve, Joseph Duffy, Glenn Smith, D. Knopman, J. Parisi, R. Petersen, D. Dickson (2005)
Atypical progressive supranuclear palsy underlying progressive apraxia of speech and nonfluent aphasiaNeurocase, 11
S. Chapman, R. Rosenberg, M. Weiner, Angela Shobe (1997)
Autosomal dominant progressive syndrome of motor-speech loss without dementiaNeurology, 49
J. Ashburner, Karl Friston (2000)
Voxel-Based Morphometry—The MethodsNeuroImage, 11
M. Blake, J. Duffy, B. Boeve, J. Ahlskog, D. Maraganore (2003)
Speech and language disorders associated with corticobasal degenerationJournal of Medical Speech-language Pathology, 11
E. Kaplan, H. Goodglass, Sandra Weintraub, Osa Segal (2001)
Boston Naming Test
A Lang (1992)
Cortical basal ganglionic degeneration presenting with "progressive loss of speech output and orofacial dyspraxia".Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 55
J. Lowe, D. FRCPath (1998)
Establishing a Pathological Diagnosis in Degenerative DementiasBrain Pathology, 8
L. Cohen, N. Benoit, P. Eeckhout, B. Ducarne, P. Brunet (1993)
Pure progressive aphemia.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 56
John Hodges (1995)
Semantic dementia: progressive fluent aphasia with temporal lobe atrophyNeurocase, 1
G. Hammond (1990)
Cerebral control of speech and limb movements
J. Hodges, K. Patterson (1996)
Nonfluent progressive aphasia and semantic dementia: A comparative neuropsychological studyJournal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 2
C. Browne, Hugiilings-Jackson Ferrier, Seth Ward, Astronomie Salisbury, Roger Geometrica, Bacon (1878)
BrainJournal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology (London, England : 1875), 4
R. Caselli, C. Jack (1992)
Asymmetric cortical degeneration syndromes. A proposed clinical classification.Archives of neurology, 49 7
D. Paviour, A. Lees, K. Josephs, T. Ozawa, M. Ganguly, C. Strand, A. Godbolt, R. Howard, T. Révész, J. Holton (2004)
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin-only-immunoreactive neuronal changes: broadening the clinical picture to include progressive supranuclear palsy.Brain : a journal of neurology, 127 Pt 11
C. Lippa, Ronald Cohen, Thomas Smith, D. Drachman (1991)
Primary progressive aphasia with focal neuronal achromasiaNeurology, 41
A. Lipton, C. White, E. Bigio (2004)
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration with motor neuron disease-type inclusions predominates in 76 cases of frontotemporal degenerationActa Neuropathologica, 108
J. Knibb, J. Xuereb, K. Patterson, J. Hodges (2006)
Clinical and pathological characterization of progressive aphasiaAnnals of Neurology, 59
H. Schuell (1973)
Differential Diagnosis of Aphasia With the Minnesota Test
C. Galton, K. Patterson, K. Graham, M. Lambon-Ralph, G. Williams, N. Antoun, B. Sahakian, J. Hodges (2001)
Differing patterns of temporal atrophy in Alzheimer’s disease and semantic dementiaNeurology, 57
R. Davies, J. Hodges, J. Kril, K. Patterson, G. Halliday, J. Xuereb (2005)
The pathological basis of semantic dementia.Brain : a journal of neurology, 128 Pt 9
J. Constantinidis, Jacques Richard, R. Tissot (1974)
Pick’s DiseaseEuropean Neurology, 11
David Williams, R. Silva, D. Paviour, A. Pittman, H. Watt, L. Kilford, J. Holton, T. Révész, A. Lees (2005)
Characteristics of two distinct clinical phenotypes in pathologically proven progressive supranuclear palsy: Richardson's syndrome and PSP-parkinsonism.Brain : a journal of neurology, 128 Pt 6
C. Galton, K. Patterson, J. Xuereb, J. Hodges (2000)
Atypical and typical presentations of Alzheimer's disease: a clinical, neuropsychological, neuroimaging and pathological study of 13 cases.Brain : a journal of neurology, 123 Pt 3
J. Hodges, R. Davies, J. Xuereb, B. Casey, M. Broe, T. Bak, J. Kril, G. Halliday (2004)
Clinicopathological correlates in frontotemporal dementiaAnnals of Neurology, 56
A. Kertesz, Wilda Davidson, P. Mccabe, K. Takagi, D. Munoz (2003)
Primary progressive aphasia: Diagnosis, varieties, evolutionJournal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 9
R. Caselli (1996)
Asymmetric cortical degeneration syndromesCurrent Opinion in Neurology, 9
A. Wechsler, M. Verity, S. Rosenschein, I. Fried, A. Scheibel (1982)
Pick's Disease: A Clinical, Computed Tomographic, and Histologic Study With Golgi Impregnation ObservationsJAMA Neurology, 39
K. Josephs, K. Josephs, J. Holton, M. Rossor, A. Godbolt, T. Ozawa, K. Strand, N. Khan, S. Al-Sarraj, T. Révész (2004)
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration and ubiquitin immunohistochemistryNeuropathology and Applied Neurobiology, 30
M. Didic, M. Ceccaldi, M. Poncet (1998)
Progressive Loss of Speech: A Neuropsychological Profile of Premotor DysfunctionEuropean Neurology, 39
P. Tyrrell, E. Warrington, R. Frackowiak, M. Rossor (1990)
Heterogeneity in progressive aphasia due to focal cortical atrophy. A clinical and PET study.Brain : a journal of neurology, 113 ( Pt 5)
J. Duffy (1995)
Motor Speech Disorders: Substrates, Differential Diagnosis, and Management
R. Wertz, L. Lapointe, J. Rosenbek (1984)
Apraxia of speech in adults: The disorder and its management
P. Nestor, N. Graham, T. Fryer, Guy Williams, K. Patterson, J. Hodges (2003)
Progressive non-fluent aphasia is associated with hypometabolism centred on the left anterior insula.Brain : a journal of neurology, 126 Pt 11
E. White (1984)
Language Intervention Strategies in Adult AphasiaJournal of Gerontological Nursing, 10
T. Bak, J. Hodges (2001)
Motor neurone disease, dementia and aphasia: coincidence, co-occurrence or continuum?Journal of Neurology, 248
E. Broussolle, S. Bakchine, M. Tommasi, B. Laurent, B. Bazin, L. Cinotti, L. Cohen, G. Chazot (1996)
Slowly progressive anarthria with late anterior opercular syndrome: a variant form of frontal cortical atrophy syndromesJournal of the Neurological Sciences, 144
R. Nass (1984)
The assessment of aphasia and related disorders By Harold Goodglass and edith kaplan philadelphia, lea & febiger, 1983 illustrated, $27.50 (package)Annals of Neurology, 16
M. Gorno-Tempini, R. Murray, K. Rankin, M. Weiner, B. Miller (2004)
Clinical, Cognitive and Anatomical Evolution from Nonfluent Progressive Aphasia to Corticobasal Syndrome: A Case ReportNeurocase, 10
E. Warrington, Merle James (1967)
Disorders of visual perception in patients with localised cerebral lesionsNeuropsychologia, 5
M. Mesulam (2003)
Primary progressive aphasia--a language-based dementia.The New England journal of medicine, 349 16
N. Graff-Radford (1995)
Progressive aphasia in a patient with Pick's disease: a neuropsychological, radiologic, and anatomic studyNeurocase, 1
D. Chan, Nick Fox, R. Scahill, W. Crum, J. Whitwell, G. Leschziner, A. Rossor, J. Stevens, L. Cipolotti, M. Rossor (2001)
Patterns of temporal lobe atrophy in semantic dementia and Alzheimer's diseaseAnnals of Neurology, 49
M. Grossman, J. Mickanin, K. Onishi, E. Hughes, M. D’Esposito, Xin-sheng Ding, A. Alavi, M. Reivich (1996)
Progressive Nonfluent Aphasia: Language, Cognitive, and PET Measures Contrasted with Probable Alzheimer's DiseaseJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 8
J. Greene, K. Patterson, J. Xuereb, J. Hodges (1996)
Alzheimer disease and nonfluent progressive aphasia.Archives of neurology, 53 10
T. Deacon (1989)
The neural circuitry underlying primate calls and human languageHuman Evolution, 4
(1971)
Normal and aphasic behaviour on a measure of auditory input and a measure of verbal output. Annual Convention of the American Speech and Hearing Association
D. Dickson, R. Weller (2011)
Neurodegeneration: The Molecular Pathology of Dementia and Movement Disorders: Dickson/Neurodegeneration: The Molecular Pathology of Dementia and Movement Disorders
M. Valenzuela (2007)
Neurodegeneration: the molecular pathology of dementia and movement disordersActa Neuropsychiatrica, 19
M. Gorno-Tempini, N. Dronkers, K. Rankin, J. Ogar, La Phengrasamy, H. Rosen, Julene Johnson, M. Weiner, B. Miller (2004)
Cognition and anatomy in three variants of primary progressive aphasiaAnnals of Neurology, 55
D. Dickson (1998)
Pick's Disease: A Modern ApproachBrain Pathology, 8
D. Dickson, C. Bergeron, S. Chin, C. Duyckaerts, D. Horoupian, K. Ikeda, K. Jellinger, P. Lantos, C. Lippa, S. Mirra, M. Tabaton, J. Vonsattel, K. Wakabayashi, I. Litvan (2002)
Office of Rare Diseases Neuropathologic Criteria for Corticobasal DegenerationJNEN: Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology, 61
R. Faber (1999)
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration: a consensus on clinical diagnostic criteria.Neurology, 53
M. Mesulam (1982)
Slowly progressive aphasia without generalized dementiaAnnals of Neurology, 11
S. Black (1996)
Focal Cortical Atrophy SyndromesBrain and Cognition, 31
R. Hart, W. Beach, J. Taylor (1997)
A case of progressive apraxia of speech and non-fluent aphasiaAphasiology, 11
S. Weintraub, N. Rubin, M. Mesulam (1990)
Primary progressive aphasia. Longitudinal course, neuropsychological profile, and language features.Archives of neurology, 47 12
(2006)
Clinicopathologic analysis of frontotemporal and corticobasal degenerations and PSP
G. Denes (2002)
Comparison of apraxia in corticobasal degeneration and progressive supranuclear palsy.Neurology, 58 8
I. Litvan, Y. Agid, D. Calne, G. Campbell, B. Dubois, R. Duvoisin, C. Goetz, L. Golbe, J. Grafman, J. Growdon, M. Hallett, J. Jankovic, N. Quinn, E. Tolosa, D. Zee (1996)
Clinical research criteria for the diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy (Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome)Neurology, 47
B. Boeve, A. Lang, I. Litvan (2003)
Corticobasal degeneration and its relationship to progressive supranuclear palsy and frontotemporal dementiaAnnals of Neurology, 54
H. Rosen, J. Kramer, M. Gorno-Tempini, N. Schuff, M. Weiner, B. Miller (2002)
Patterns of cerebral atrophy in primary progressive aphasia.The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry, 10 1
E. Renzi, L. Vignolo (1962)
The token test: A sensitive test to detect receptive disturbances in aphasics.Brain : a journal of neurology, 85
A. Kertesz, L. Hudson, I. Mackenzie, D. Munoz (1994)
The pathology and nosology of primary progressive aphasiaNeurology, 44
B. Boeve, D. Dickson, J. Duffy, J. Bartleson, M. Trenerry, R. Petersen (2003)
Progressive Nonfluent Aphasia and Subsequent Aphasic Dementia Associated with Atypical Progressive Supranuclear Palsy PathologyEuropean Neurology, 49
L. Elst, F. Juengling, J. Kassubek, K. Schmidtke, T. Thiel, D. Ebert, P. Dykierek, M. Hüll (2002)
On the role of quantitative brain imaging in the differential diagnosis of speech disordersPsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 56
D. Knopman, A. Mastri, William II, J. Sung, T. Rustan (1990)
Dementia lacking distinctive histologie featuresNeurology, 40
A. Craenhals, Amr. Ruymbeke, D. Rectem, X. Seron, E. Laterre (1990)
Is Slowly Progressive Aphasia Actually a New Clinical EntityAphasiology, 4
G. Mckhann, M. Albert, M. Grossman, B. Miller, D. Dickson, J. Trojanowski (2001)
Clinical and pathological diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia: report of the Work Group on Frontotemporal Dementia and Pick's Disease.Archives of neurology, 58 11
M. Rossor, T. Révész, P. Lantos, E. Warrington (2000)
Semantic dementia with ubiquitin-positive tau-negative inclusion bodies.Brain : a journal of neurology, 123 ( Pt 2)
N. Dronkers (1996)
A new brain region for coordinating speech articulationNature, 384
(1989)
Semantic dementia: a form of circumscribed atrophy
M. Senjem, J. Gunter, M. Shiung, R. Petersen, C. Jack (2005)
Comparison of different methodological implementations of voxel-based morphometry in neurodegenerative diseaseNeuroImage, 26
R. Leiguarda, P. Pramstaller, M. Merello, S. Starkstein, Andew Lees, C. Marsden (1997)
Apraxia in Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system atrophy and neuroleptic-induced parkinsonism.Brain : a journal of neurology, 120 ( Pt 1)
L. Kartsounis, R. Crellin, R. Crellin, H. Crewes, B. Toone, B. Toone (1991)
Primary Progressive Non-Fluent Aphasia: A Case StudyCortex, 27
J. Duffy, R. Petersen (1992)
Primary progressive aphasiaAphasiology, 6
D. Grimes, C. Bergeron, A. Lang (1999)
Motor neuron disease‐inclusion dementia presenting as cortical‐basal ganglionic degenerationMovement Disorders, 14
J. Hauw, S. Daniel, D. Dickson, D. Horoupian, K. Jellinger, P. Lantos, A. Mckee, M. Tabaton, I. Litvan (1994)
Preliminary NINDS neuropathologic criteria for Steele‐Richardson‐Olszewski syndrome (progressive supranuclear palsy)Neurology, 44
Apraxia of speech (AOS) is a motor speech disorder characterized by slow speaking rate, abnormal prosody and distorted sound substitutions, additions, repetitions and prolongations, sometimes accompanied by groping, and trial and error articulatory movements. Although AOS is frequently subsumed under the heading of aphasia, and indeed most often co-occurs with aphasia, it can be the predominant or even the sole manifestation of a degenerative neurological disease. In this study we determine whether the clinical classifications of aphasia and AOS correlated with pathological diagnoses and specific biochemical and anatomical structural abnormalities. Seventeen cases with initial diagnoses of a degenerative aphasia or AOS were re-classified independently by two speech-language pathologists—blinded to pathological and biochemical findings—into one of five operationally defined categories of aphasia and AOS. Pathological diagnoses in the 17 cases were progressive supranuclear palsy in 6, corticobasal degeneration in 5, frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin-only-immunoreactive changes in 5 and Pick's disease in 1. Magnetic resonance imaging analysis using voxel-based morphometry (VBM), and single photon emission tomography were completed, blinded to the clinical diagnoses, and clinicoimaging and clinicopathological associations were then sought. Interjudge clinical classification reliability was 87% (κ = 0.8) for all evaluations. Eleven cases had evidence of AOS, of which all (100%) had a pathological diagnosis characterized by underlying tau biochemistry, while five of the other six cases without AOS did not have tau biochemistry (P = 0.001). A majority of the 17 cases had more than one yearly evaluation, demonstrating the evolution of the speech and language syndromes, as well as motor signs. VBM revealed the premotor and supplemental motor cortices to be the main cortical regions associated with AOS, while the anterior peri-sylvian region was associated with non-fluent aphasia. Refining the classification of the degenerative aphasias and AOS may be necessary to improve our understanding of the relationships among behavioural, pathological and imaging correlations.
Brain – Oxford University Press
Published: Apr 13, 2006
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.