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Bihemispheric Language Disorders in Early-Stage Dementia of the Alzheimer Type: Evidence From a Novel Metalinguistic Task

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 January 2005

Luc P. De Vreese
Affiliation:
Chair of Geriatrics and Gerontology, the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Modena, Modena, Italy
Mirco Neri
Affiliation:
Chair of Geriatrics and Gerontology, the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Modena, Modena, Italy
Gianfranco Salvioli
Affiliation:
Chair of Geriatrics and Gerontology, the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Modena, Modena, Italy
Carlo Cipolli
Affiliation:
Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Modena, Modena, Italy

Abstract

Because dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT) is commonly characterized by bilateral cerebral atrophy, we examined the issue of higher linguistic abilities lateralized to the right cerebral hemisphere (RH) in earlystage DAT. A modified version of an insertion task was administered to 14 patients with probable DAT, 8 right-hemisphere brain-damaged (RHD) patients, 8 left-hemisphere brain-damaged (LHD) patients, and 28 normal elderly (control, CTR) right-handed subjects. The task consisted of presenting the subjects with 53 well-formed sentences; in each a word or syntagm had to be inserted grammatically. Twenty-eight word/syntagm insertions required grammatical role reassignment of a lexical item in the stimulus sentence (shift, sensitive to RHD); 25 insertions implied only semantic reinterpretation of the target sentence (nonshift, sensitive to LHD). The three pathological groups were relatively and similarly impaired on standard aphasia assessment. The performances of the DAT patients, controlled for global cognitive verbal proficiency, verbal cognitive skills, and mood, were found to be significantly worse than the performances of the CTR group on both insertion subtests, whereas there were no significant differences between the DAT and RHD subjects on the shift items or between the DAT and LHD subjects on the nonshift items. Similarly, no differences were noted between the RHD and CTR nonshift scores, or between the LHD and CTR shift scores. On the other hand, the LHD group outscored the RHD group on the shift insertions. A comparison between the two insertion subtests revealed that only the RHD and DAT groups performed significantly worse on the shift than on the nonshift items. Results are consistent with other anecdotally reported RH-specific language-related disorders in early DAT and replicate previous findings of bihemispheric extralinguistic disturbances in these patients.

Type
Third Place 1995 IPA/Bayer Research Awards in Psychogeriatrics
Copyright
© 1996 International Psychogeriatric Association

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