Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Chapman University, Irvine, CA, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2020 Nov;148:107651. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2020.107651. Epub 2020 Oct 9.
Language recovery following acute left hemisphere (LH) stroke is notoriously difficult to predict. Global language measures (e.g., overall aphasia severity) and gross lesion metrics (e.g., size) provide incomplete recovery predictions. In this study, we test the hypothesis that the types of naming errors patients produce, combined with dysfunctional brain tissue metrics, can provide additional insight into recovery following acute LH stroke. One hundred forty-eight individuals who were hospitalized with a new LH stroke completed clinical neuroimaging and assessments of naming and global language skills. A subset of participants again completed language testing at subacute, early (5-7 months post-stroke), and late (≥11 months post-stroke) chronic phases. At each time point, we coded naming errors into four types (semantic, phonological, mixed and unrelated) and determined error type totals and proportions. Dysfunctional tissue measures included the percentage of damage to language network regions and hypoperfusion in vascular territories. A higher proportion of semantic errors was associated with better acute naming, but higher proportions of other error types was related to poorer accuracy. Naming and global language skills significantly improved over time , but naming error profiles did not change. Fewer acute unrelated errors and less damage to left angular gyrus resulted in optimal naming and language recovery by the final testing time point, yet patients with more acute errors and damage to left middle temporal gyrus demonstrated the greatest increases in language over time. These results illustrate that naming error profiles, particularly unrelated errors, add power to predictions of language recovery after stroke.
急性左半球(LH)卒中后语言的恢复情况很难预测,这是众所周知的。整体语言测量(例如,整体失语症严重程度)和大体损伤指标(例如,大小)提供了不完整的恢复预测。在这项研究中,我们测试了以下假设:患者产生的命名错误类型,结合功能失调的脑组织指标,可以为急性 LH 卒中后的恢复提供更多的见解。148 名因新 LH 卒中住院的患者完成了临床神经影像学以及命名和整体语言技能评估。一部分参与者在亚急性期、早期(卒中后 5-7 个月)和晚期(≥11 个月后)进行了再次语言测试。在每个时间点,我们将命名错误分为四类(语义、语音、混合和不相关),并确定了错误类型的总数和比例。功能失调的组织测量指标包括语言网络区域的损伤百分比和血管区域的灌注不足。语义错误比例越高与急性命名能力越好相关,而其他错误类型的比例越高与准确性越差相关。命名和整体语言技能随着时间的推移显著提高,但命名错误模式并没有改变。急性不相关错误减少和左侧角回损伤减少导致最终测试时间点的命名和语言恢复达到最佳状态,但急性错误更多和左侧颞中回损伤更多的患者随着时间的推移语言能力的提高幅度最大。这些结果表明,命名错误模式,特别是不相关错误,为卒中后语言恢复的预测提供了更大的力量。