Midorikawa Akira, Kawamura Mitsuru, Kezuka Machiko
Department of Neurology, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Neurocase. 2003 Jun;9(3):232-8. doi: 10.1076/neur.9.3.232.15558.
In the process of reading music, the reading of rhythm and pitch might be differentiated, although there is no evidence of this to date. There have been cases of disorders restricted to the reading of pitch, but none in which the disorder has been restricted to the reading of rhythm. We present a case of musical alexia and agraphia with Wernicke's aphasia. An in-depth assessment of the subject's musical reading ability showed that her musical alexia was restricted to unfamiliar melodies. When a melody was divided into rhythm elements and pitch elements, pitch reading was preserved, but rhythm reading was severely disturbed. This is the first case reported of a disorder restricted to rhythm reading, and suggests the independence of rhythm reading and pitch reading.