INSERM U751, laboratoire Epilepsie et Cognition, Université de la Méditerranée, faculté de médecine Timone, 27 Boulevard Jean-Moulin, Marseille cedex 05, France.
Brain. 2009 Oct;132(Pt 10):2772-84. doi: 10.1093/brain/awp083. Epub 2009 Apr 21.
Word finding difficulties are often reported by epileptic patients with seizures originating from the language dominant cerebral hemisphere, for example, in temporal lobe epilepsy. Evidence regarding the brain regions underlying this deficit comes from studies of peri-operative electro-cortical stimulation, as well as post-surgical performance. This evidence has highlighted a role for the anterior part of the dominant temporal lobe in oral word production. These conclusions contrast with findings from activation studies involving healthy speakers or acute ischaemic stroke patients, where the region most directly related to word retrieval appears to be the posterior part of the left temporal lobe. To clarify the neural basis of word retrieval in temporal lobe epilepsy, we tested forty-three drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy patients (28 left, 15 right). Comprehensive neuropsychological and language assessments were performed. Single spoken word production was elicited with picture or definition stimuli. Detailed analysis allowed the distinction of impaired word retrieval from other possible causes of naming failure. Finally, the neural substrate of the deficit was assessed by correlating word retrieval performance and resting-state brain metabolism in 18 fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose-Positron Emission Tomography. Naming difficulties often resulted from genuine word retrieval failures (anomic states), both in picture and in definition tasks. Left temporal lobe epilepsy patients showed considerably worse performance than right temporal lobe epilepsy patients. Performance was poorer in the definition than in the picture task. Across patients and the left temporal lobe epilepsy subgroup, frequency of anomic state was negatively correlated with resting-state brain metabolism in left posterior and basal temporal regions (Brodmann's area 20-37-39). These results show the involvement of posterior temporal regions, within a larger antero-posterior-basal temporal network, in the specific process of word retrieval in temporal lobe epilepsy. A tentative explanation for these findings is that epilepsy induces functional deafferentation between anterior temporal structures devoted to semantic processing and neocortical posterior temporal structures devoted to lexical processing.
找词困难通常是由起源于优势半球的癫痫患者报告的,例如颞叶癫痫。关于该缺陷基础的脑区的证据来自于围手术期电皮质刺激以及术后表现的研究。这一证据突出了优势颞叶前部在口语单词产生中的作用。这些结论与涉及健康说话者或急性缺血性中风患者的激活研究结果形成对比,在这些研究中,与单词检索最直接相关的区域似乎是左侧颞叶的后部。为了阐明颞叶癫痫中单词检索的神经基础,我们测试了 43 名耐药性颞叶癫痫患者(28 名左侧,15 名右侧)。进行了全面的神经心理学和语言评估。使用图片或定义刺激引出单个单词的口语生成。详细的分析允许将单词检索障碍与命名失败的其他可能原因区分开来。最后,通过在 18 名氟代-2-脱氧-d-葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描中关联单词检索性能和静息状态大脑代谢,评估了缺陷的神经基础。命名困难通常是由于真正的单词检索失败(命名障碍),无论是在图片任务还是在定义任务中。左侧颞叶癫痫患者的表现明显比右侧颞叶癫痫患者差。在定义任务中的表现比在图片任务中的差。在所有患者和左侧颞叶癫痫亚组中,命名障碍的频率与左侧后颞区和基底颞区(Brodmann 区 20-37-39)的静息状态大脑代谢呈负相关。这些结果表明,在颞叶癫痫中,单词检索的特定过程涉及到后部颞区,位于一个更大的前-后-基底颞叶网络内。对于这些发现的一个试探性解释是,癫痫引起了专门用于语义处理的前颞叶结构与专门用于词汇处理的新皮质后部颞叶结构之间的功能去传入。