Progression of logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia to apraxia and semantic memory deficits

Due to the nature of neurodegenerative disorders, patients with primary progressive aphasia develop cognitive impairment other than aphasia as the disorder progresses. The progression of logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia (lvPPA), however, has not been well described. In particular, praxi...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC neurology 2013-11, Vol.13 (1), p.158-158, Article 158
Hauptverfasser: Funayama, Michitaka, Nakagawa, Yoshitaka, Yamaya, Yoko, Yoshino, Fumihiro, Mimura, Masaru, Kato, Motoichiro
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container_issue 1
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container_title BMC neurology
container_volume 13
creator Funayama, Michitaka
Nakagawa, Yoshitaka
Yamaya, Yoko
Yoshino, Fumihiro
Mimura, Masaru
Kato, Motoichiro
description Due to the nature of neurodegenerative disorders, patients with primary progressive aphasia develop cognitive impairment other than aphasia as the disorder progresses. The progression of logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia (lvPPA), however, has not been well described. In particular, praxic disorders and semantic memory deficits have rarely been reported. We report three patients in the initial stage of lvPPA who subsequently developed apraxia in the middle stage and developed clinically evident semantic memory deficits in the advanced stages. The present case series suggests that some patients with lvPPA develop an atypical type of dementia with apraxia and semantic memory deficits, suggesting that these cases should be classified as a type of early-onset Alzheimer's disease.
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subjects Alzheimer's disease
Amnesia
Aphasia
Aphasia, Primary Progressive - complications
Aphasia, Primary Progressive - diagnosis
Aphasia, Primary Progressive - psychology
Apraxias - complications
Apraxias - diagnosis
Apraxias - psychology
Behavior
Care and treatment
Case Report
Case studies
Cognitive ability
Consent
Dementia
Development and progression
Diagnosis
Disease Progression
Electroencephalography
Humans
Language disorders
Male
Medical imaging
Memory
Memory Disorders - complications
Memory Disorders - diagnosis
Memory Disorders - psychology
Middle Aged
NMR
Nuclear magnetic resonance
Patients
Phonetics
Risk factors
title Progression of logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia to apraxia and semantic memory deficits
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