Antonsson Malin, Johansson Charlotte, Hartelius Lena, Henriksson Ingrid, Longoni Francesca, Wengelin Åsa
Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, Speech and Language Pathology Unit, Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Department of Swedish, Faculty of Arts, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2018 May;53(3):592-604. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12373. Epub 2018 Feb 7.
Low-grade glioma (LGG) is a type of brain tumour often situated in or near areas involved in language, sensory or motor functions. Depending on localization and tumour characteristics, language or cognitive impairments due to tumour growth and/or surgical resection are obvious risks. One task that may be at risk is writing, both because it requires intact language and memory function and because it is a very complex and cognitively demanding task. The most commonly reported language deficit in LGG patients is oral lexical-retrieval difficulties, and poor lexical retrieval would be expected to affect writing fluency.
To explore whether writing fluency is affected in LGG patients before and after surgery and whether it is related to performance on tasks of oral lexical retrieval.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Twenty consecutive patients with presumed LGG wrote a narrative and performed a copy task before undergoing surgery and at 3-month follow-up using keystroke-logging software. The same tasks were performed by a reference group (N = 31). The patients were also tested using the Boston Naming Test (BNT) and word-fluency tests before and after surgery. Writing fluency was compared between the patients and the reference group, and between the patients before and after surgery. Relationships between performance on tests of oral lexical retrieval and writing fluency were investigated both before and after surgery.
OUTCOME & RESULTS: Different aspects of writing fluency were affected in the LGG patients both before and after surgery. However, when controlling for the effect of typing speed, the LGG group differed significantly from the reference group only in the proportion of pauses within words. After surgery, a significant decline was seen in production rate and typing speed in the narrative task, and a significant increase was seen in pauses before words. Strong positive relationships were found between oral lexical retrieval and writing fluency both before and after surgery.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: Although aspects of writing fluency were affected both before and after surgery, the results indicate that typing speed is an important factor behind the pre-surgery differences. However, the decline in overall productivity and the increase in pauses before words after surgery could be related to a lexical deficit. This is supported by the finding that oral lexical-retrieval scores were strongly correlated with writing fluency. However, further exploration is needed to identify the language and cognitive abilities affecting writing processes in LGG patients.
低级别胶质瘤(LGG)是一种脑肿瘤,通常位于涉及语言、感觉或运动功能的区域内或附近。根据肿瘤的位置和特征,肿瘤生长和/或手术切除导致的语言或认知障碍是明显的风险。写作可能是一项面临风险的任务,这既是因为它需要完整的语言和记忆功能,也是因为它是一项非常复杂且对认知要求很高的任务。LGG患者最常报告的语言缺陷是口语词汇检索困难,预计词汇检索能力差会影响写作流畅性。
探讨LGG患者手术前后的写作流畅性是否受到影响,以及它是否与口语词汇检索任务的表现相关。
20例连续的疑似LGG患者在手术前和术后3个月随访时,使用按键记录软件完成一篇记叙文写作和一项抄写任务。对照组(N = 31)完成相同任务。患者在手术前后还接受了波士顿命名测试(BNT)和词汇流畅性测试。比较患者与对照组之间以及患者手术前后的写作流畅性。研究手术前后口语词汇检索测试表现与写作流畅性之间的关系。
LGG患者手术前后写作流畅性的不同方面均受到影响。然而,在控制打字速度的影响后,LGG组与对照组仅在单词内停顿比例上存在显著差异。术后,记叙文任务的产出率和打字速度显著下降,单词前的停顿显著增加。手术前后口语词汇检索与写作流畅性之间均发现强正相关。
虽然手术前后写作流畅性的各个方面均受到影响,但结果表明打字速度是术前差异背后的重要因素。然而,术后总体生产率下降以及单词前停顿增加可能与词汇缺陷有关。口语词汇检索分数与写作流畅性密切相关的这一发现支持了这一点。然而,需要进一步探索以确定影响LGG患者写作过程的语言和认知能力。