Kobayashi Yasutaka, Yamauchi Risa
aDepartment of Rehabilitation Medicine, Fukui General Hospital, Fukui, Japan.
bDepartment of Rehabilitation Medicine, Fukui General Clinic, Fukui, Japan.
Case Rep Neurol. 2017 Mar 20;9(1):36-43. doi: 10.1159/000458434. eCollection 2017 Jan-Apr.
A 63-year-old woman was hospitalized for rehabilitation from the aftereffects of an anoxic brain injury. In addition to a general cognitive decline, agraphia of and was noted at the time of admission, which had advanced to agraphia which is dominant in at the time of hospital discharge. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed no stroke lesions, and brain perfusion scintigraphy found a decreased blood flow in the bilateral parietal lobes. We hereby report on this case because case reports on agraphia caused by anoxic brain injury are extremely rare.