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口吃的神经学基础:一些初步发现。

The neurological underpinnings of cluttering: Some initial findings.

作者信息

Ward David, Connally Emily L, Pliatsikas Christos, Bretherton-Furness Jess, Watkins Kate E

机构信息

School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, The University of Reading, Reading RG6 6AA, UK; Apple House Centre for Stammering, Warneford Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX, UK.

Department of Experimental Psychology, South Parks Road, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3UD, UK.

出版信息

J Fluency Disord. 2015 Mar;43:1-16. doi: 10.1016/j.jfludis.2014.12.003. Epub 2015 Jan 8.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Cluttering is a fluency disorder characterised by overly rapid or jerky speech patterns that compromise intelligibility. The neural correlates of cluttering are unknown but theoretical accounts implicate the basal ganglia and medial prefrontal cortex. Dysfunction in these brain areas would be consistent with difficulties in selection and control of speech motor programs that are characteristic of speech disfluencies in cluttering. There is a surprising lack of investigation into this disorder using modern imaging techniques. Here, we used functional MRI to investigate the neural correlates of cluttering.

METHOD

We scanned 17 adults who clutter and 17 normally fluent control speakers matched for age and sex. Brain activity was recorded using sparse-sampling functional MRI while participants viewed scenes and either (i) produced overt speech describing the scene or (ii) read out loud a sentence provided that described the scene. Speech was recorded and analysed off line. Differences in brain activity for each condition compared to a silent resting baseline and between conditions were analysed for each group separately (cluster-forming threshold Z>3.1, extent p<0.05, corrected) and then these differences were further compared between the two groups (voxel threshold p<0.01, extent>30 voxels, uncorrected).

RESULTS

In both conditions, the patterns of activation in adults who clutter and control speakers were strikingly similar, particularly at the cortical level. Direct group comparisons revealed greater activity in adults who clutter compared to control speakers in the lateral premotor cortex bilaterally and, as predicted, on the medial surface (pre-supplementary motor area). Subcortically, adults who clutter showed greater activity than control speakers in the basal ganglia. Specifically, the caudate nucleus and putamen were overactive in adults who clutter for the comparison of picture description with sentence reading. In addition, adults who clutter had reduced activity relative to control speakers in the lateral anterior cerebellum bilaterally. Eleven of the 17 adults who clutter also stuttered. This comorbid diagnosis of stuttering was found to contribute to the abnormal overactivity seen in the group of adults who clutter in the right ventral premotor cortex and right anterior cingulate cortex. In the remaining areas of abnormal activity seen in adults who clutter compared to controls, the subgroup who clutter and stutter did not differ from the subgroup who clutter but do not stutter.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings were in good agreement with theoretical predictions regarding the neural correlates of cluttering. We found evidence for abnormal function in the basal ganglia and their cortical output target, the medial prefrontal cortex. The findings are discussed in relation to models of cluttering that point to problems with motor control of speech.

EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES

This paper reports findings on the neural correlates seen in adults who clutter, and offers hypotheses as to how these might map onto the behaviours seen amongst those who clutter. Readers will be able to (a) identify the structures that are implicated in the disorder of cluttering, (b) understand arguments relating these structures to the behavioural expression of the disorder, (c) understand some of the complexities in interpreting data pertaining to recovery from cluttering, (d) understand where future efforts in research into the neurological correlates of cluttering should be focussed.

摘要

背景

言语紊乱是一种流畅性障碍,其特征是言语模式过于快速或急促,影响可懂度。言语紊乱的神经关联尚不清楚,但理论解释涉及基底神经节和内侧前额叶皮质。这些脑区的功能障碍与言语运动程序的选择和控制困难相一致,而这种困难是言语紊乱中言语不流畅的特征。令人惊讶的是,目前缺乏使用现代成像技术对这种障碍的研究。在此,我们使用功能磁共振成像来研究言语紊乱的神经关联。

方法

我们扫描了17名患有言语紊乱的成年人以及17名年龄和性别匹配的正常言语流畅的对照者。在参与者观看场景时,使用稀疏采样功能磁共振成像记录大脑活动,参与者要么(i)出声描述场景,要么(ii)大声朗读描述该场景的句子。言语被记录下来并离线分析。分别对每组分析每种条件下与静息基线相比以及不同条件之间的大脑活动差异(聚类形成阈值Z>3.1,范围p<0.05,校正),然后进一步比较两组之间的这些差异(体素阈值p<0.01,范围>30个体素,未校正)。

结果

在两种条件下,患有言语紊乱的成年人与对照者的激活模式惊人地相似,尤其是在皮质水平。直接的组间比较显示,与对照者相比,患有言语紊乱的成年人在双侧外侧运动前皮质以及如预期的在内侧表面(前辅助运动区)有更强的活动。在皮质下,患有言语紊乱的成年人在基底神经节的活动比对照者更强。具体而言,在将图片描述与句子朗读进行比较时,患有言语紊乱的成年人的尾状核和壳核过度活跃。此外,患有言语紊乱的成年人双侧外侧前小脑的活动相对于对照者有所减少。17名患有言语紊乱的成年人中有11名也口吃。发现这种口吃的共病诊断导致了在患有言语紊乱的成年人组中右侧腹侧运动前皮质和右侧前扣带回皮质出现异常的过度活动。在与对照者相比患有言语紊乱的成年人中观察到的其余异常活动区域,患有言语紊乱且口吃的亚组与患有言语紊乱但不口吃的亚组没有差异。

结论

我们的发现与关于言语紊乱神经关联的理论预测高度一致。我们发现了基底神经节及其皮质输出靶点内侧前额叶皮质功能异常的证据。结合言语紊乱模型对这些发现进行了讨论,这些模型指出了言语运动控制方面的问题。

教育目标

本文报告了在患有言语紊乱的成年人中观察到的神经关联的研究结果,并就这些结果如何与言语紊乱者的行为表现相关联提出了假设。读者将能够(a)识别与言语紊乱相关的结构,(b)理解将这些结构与该障碍的行为表现联系起来的论点,(c)理解解释与言语紊乱恢复相关数据的一些复杂性,(d)理解未来关于言语紊乱神经关联研究的努力方向应聚焦何处。

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