Ceslis Amelia, Argall Rosemary, Henderson Robert D, McCombe Pamela A, Robinson Gail A
Neuropsychology Research Unit, School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Neuropsychology Research Unit, School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, QLD, Australia; Neurology, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Heston, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Cortex. 2020 Nov;132:349-360. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2020.09.003. Epub 2020 Sep 18.
Language disorders are increasingly recognised in Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), supporting the view of ALS as a multi-system disorder, impacting cognitive and motor function. However, the language impairments are heterogeneous and recent focus has been on determining the language profile across the ALS spectrum with little focus on spontaneous speech. The current study systematically investigated a wide range of language abilities in an unselected ALS sample (N = 22), including spontaneous speech. We analysed the ALS patients' performance as a group, compared to age-, education- and IQ-matched healthy controls (N = 21), and as a case series to identify dementia and specific language profiles. The ALS group was impaired on measures of spontaneous speech, word fluency and action naming. By contrast, object naming, semantic memory (object and actions), sentence comprehension and repetition (word and sentences) were comparable to healthy controls. In line with recent suggestions, our ALS patients' action naming (but not action semantic) deficit does not support the notion that action processing may be selectively impaired in ALS. The case series demonstrated that 14% of patients had probable dementia, 31% showed significant cognitive and/or language impairment and 55% were unimpaired, consistent with the spectrum of cognitive and language impairments reported in the literature. In addition, 36% of ALS patients produced significantly fewer words per minute on a spontaneous speech task than the control group, with this difference remaining when the ALS patients with frontotemporal dementia were excluded from the analysis. This pattern was observed across the ALS spectrum and in both limb and bulbar onset patients. The pattern of performance observed in the present study suggests that spontaneous speech is reduced across the ALS spectrum even in those with intact core language abilities.
语言障碍在肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)中越来越受到认可,这支持了将ALS视为一种多系统疾病的观点,它会影响认知和运动功能。然而,语言障碍具有异质性,最近的研究重点一直是确定ALS谱系中的语言特征,而很少关注自发言语。本研究系统地调查了一个未经筛选的ALS样本(N = 22)中的多种语言能力,包括自发言语。我们将ALS患者作为一个整体进行表现分析,与年龄、教育程度和智商匹配的健康对照组(N = 21)进行比较,并作为一个病例系列来识别痴呆和特定的语言特征。ALS组在自发言语、词汇流畅性和动作命名测试中表现受损。相比之下,物体命名、语义记忆(物体和动作)、句子理解和重复(单词和句子)与健康对照组相当。与最近的观点一致,我们的ALS患者的动作命名(而非动作语义)缺陷并不支持动作处理在ALS中可能被选择性损害的观点。病例系列表明,14%的患者可能患有痴呆,31%表现出明显的认知和/或语言障碍,55%未受损害,这与文献中报道的认知和语言障碍谱系一致。此外,36%的ALS患者在自发言语任务中每分钟说出的单词明显少于对照组,在排除额颞叶痴呆的ALS患者后进行分析,这种差异仍然存在。在整个ALS谱系以及肢体和延髓起病的患者中都观察到了这种模式。本研究中观察到的表现模式表明,即使在核心语言能力完好的患者中,整个ALS谱系中的自发言语也会减少。