We report the case of a patient, AC, affected by a progressive fluent aphasia associated with left temporal lobe atrophy. The clinical picture was compatible with a diagnosis of ‘semantic dementia’. The progressive linguistic disturbance was characteristic, in that phonology and articulation were preserved; speech was fluent but progressively impoverished of content words. Other aspects of cognitive function were initially unimpaired, and functional independence was maintained into the advanced stages of disease. The patient's single word reading was studied in order to assess the presence of surface dyslexia (non-lexical reading). This reading disorder has been described in English patients with semantic dementia or Alzheimer's disease who were impaired on irregular word reading, and has been related to the severity of semantic impairment. Evidence from AC indicates that surface dyslexia in Italian, which has a relatively transparent orthography at the segmental level, can be diagnosed on the basis of stress errors in words with
Surface dyslexia in an Italian patient with semantic dementia
ROZZINI, Luca;
1997-01-01
Abstract
We report the case of a patient, AC, affected by a progressive fluent aphasia associated with left temporal lobe atrophy. The clinical picture was compatible with a diagnosis of ‘semantic dementia’. The progressive linguistic disturbance was characteristic, in that phonology and articulation were preserved; speech was fluent but progressively impoverished of content words. Other aspects of cognitive function were initially unimpaired, and functional independence was maintained into the advanced stages of disease. The patient's single word reading was studied in order to assess the presence of surface dyslexia (non-lexical reading). This reading disorder has been described in English patients with semantic dementia or Alzheimer's disease who were impaired on irregular word reading, and has been related to the severity of semantic impairment. Evidence from AC indicates that surface dyslexia in Italian, which has a relatively transparent orthography at the segmental level, can be diagnosed on the basis of stress errors in words withI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.