Ewha Med J.  1988 Dec;11(4):271-275. 10.12771/emj.1988.11.4.271.

A Clinical Study of Aphasia: Types and Prognosis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, Ewha Womans University, Korea.

Abstract

Aphasia is a language disorder due to damage of the language center in the dominant hemisphere. I studied 42 patients whose main neurologic symptom was aphasia. In 42 aphasia patients, motor aphasia appeared in 13 pts(30.9%), sensory aphasia in 11 pts(26.1%), conduction aphasia in 5 pts(11.9%), anomic aphasia in 4 pts(9.5%), global aphasia in 4 pts(9.5%), transcortical motor aphasia in 3 pts(7.4%), transcortical sensory aphasia in 2 pts(4.7%). The most common associated pathologic condition was hypertension(85.7%) and the others were hypertriglyceridemia(42.9%), cardiac arrythmia(38.1%), transient ischemic attack(14.5%), seizure(9.5%) and hypotension(7.4%). The most common combined neurologic symptom was motor hemiparesis(26.22%), and the others were dysphagia, sensory hemianesthesia, ocular motor diturbance, agraphia, alexia, acaculia, finger agnosia and apraxia. The anomic aphasia and transcortical aphasia had best prognosis and the global aphasia had worst prognosis.


MeSH Terms

Agnosia
Agraphia
Anomia
Aphasia*
Aphasia, Broca
Aphasia, Conduction
Aphasia, Wernicke
Apraxias
Deglutition Disorders
Dyslexia
Humans
Language Disorders
Neurologic Manifestations
Prognosis*
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