Abstract
A 68-year-old right-handed woman with no history of brain damage or familial left-handedness was admitted to our hospital due to the acute onset of speech difficulty; her speech was nonfluent. Literal and phonological paraphasias, agrammatism and paragrammatism were observed. Brain MRI revealed an acute infarction in the right anterior cerebral artery territory, involving the right corpus callosum. Moreover, cerebral blood flow was decreased not only in the area of the right corpus callosum but also in the left fronto-temporal lobe, suggesting crossed diaschisis. This is a rare case of crossed aphasia following an infarction in the right corpus callosum.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
MeSH terms
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Aged
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Aphasia / diagnosis
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Aphasia / etiology*
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Aphasia / physiopathology
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Auditory Perception
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Cerebral Infarction / complications*
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Cerebral Infarction / diagnostic imaging
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Cerebral Infarction / pathology*
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Cerebral Infarction / physiopathology
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Cerebrovascular Circulation
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Corpus Callosum / blood supply
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Corpus Callosum / diagnostic imaging
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Corpus Callosum / pathology*
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Electrocardiography
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Female
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Functional Laterality
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Handwriting
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Humans
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Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
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Infarction, Anterior Cerebral Artery / complications
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Infarction, Anterior Cerebral Artery / pathology
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Language Tests
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Reading
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Speech
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Speech Disorders / etiology
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Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon