April R S, Han M
Arch Neurol. 1980 Jun;37(6):342-6. doi: 10.1001/archneur.1980.00500550044003.
A persistent nonfluent aphasia following a right cerebral infarction developed in a 74-year-old right-handed Chinese man. Computerized axial tomography localized the lesion in the right frontal lobe. This case is similar to a previously reported one, also with crossed aphasia in a bilingual and dextral Chinese person. Despite these two independent observations and in spite of the fact that unusual cerebral organization might be related to early learning of a nonalphabetic (ideographic) language, preliminary sampling has failed to demonstrate a greater incidence of crossed aphasia in two separate Chinese populations.
一名74岁惯用右手的中国男性在右侧脑梗死之后出现了持续性非流畅性失语症。计算机断层扫描将病灶定位在右侧额叶。该病例与之前报道的一例相似,也是一名双语且惯用右手的中国人出现交叉性失语。尽管有这两项独立观察结果,且尽管异常的大脑组织可能与早期学习非字母(表意)语言有关,但初步抽样未能证实在两个不同的中国人群体中交叉性失语的发生率更高。