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"Cerebrovascular disease"

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"Cerebrovascular disease"

Original Article

Subcortical Aphasia After Stroke
Eun Kyoung Kang, Hae Min Sohn, Moon-Ku Han, Nam-Jong Paik
Ann Rehabil Med 2017;41(5):725-733.   Published online October 31, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5535/arm.2017.41.5.725
Objective

To evaluate the types and severity of subcortical aphasia after stroke and to determine the predictors of the degree of aphasic impairment.

Methods

Medical records of 38 patients with post-stroke subcortical aphasia (19 males; mean age, 61.7±13.8 years) were reviewed retrospectively with respect to the following tests: the Korean version of the Western Aphasia Battery (K-WAB), the Korean version of the Modified Barthel Index (K-MBI), and the Fugl-Meyer Index (FMI). The severity of aphasia was evaluated by the aphasia quotient (AQ) and the language quotient (LQ).

Results

Anomic aphasia was the most frequent type of aphasia (n=15, 39.5%), and the lesion most frequently observed in subcortical aphasia was located in the basal ganglia (n=19, 50.0%). Patients with lesions in the basal ganglia exhibited the lowest scores on the FMI for the upper extremities (p=0.04). Severity of aphasia was significantly correlated with the K-MBI (Pearson correlation coefficient: γ=0.45, p=0.01 for AQ and γ=0.53, p=0.01 for LQ) and FMI scores for the lower extremities (γ=0.43, p=0.03 for AQ and γ=0.49, p=0.05 for LQ). In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, K-MBI remained the only explanatory variable closely associated with aphasia severity.

Conclusion

This study showed the general characteristics of post-stroke subcortical aphasia, and it revealed that K-MBI was an associated and explanatory factor for aphasia severity.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
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    Neuroscience.2025; 564: 160.     CrossRef
  • Characteristics and prognosis of language impairment in subcortical aphasia of acute stroke patients
    Zinan Yuan, Siqi Li, Xinya Chen, Yang Liu, Anji Zheng, Liqun Gao, Zaizhu Han, Yumei Zhang
    Frontiers in Neurology.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Neurodynamic Speech Disorders in the Acute Period of Ischemic Stroke
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    Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology.2024; 54(4): 554.     CrossRef
  • Clinical characteristics of post-stroke basal ganglia aphasia and the study of language-related white matter tracts based on diffusion spectrum imaging
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    NeuroImage.2024; 295: 120664.     CrossRef
  • Brain structural–functional coupling mechanism in mild subcortical stroke and its relationship with cognition
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  • Neurodynamic speech disorders in the acute ischemic stroke
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    S.S. Korsakov Journal of Neurology and Psychiatry.2023; 123(12): 12.     CrossRef
  • Characteristics of Aphasia in Ischemic Stroke Patients at Dr. Mahar Mardjono National Brain Center Hospital Indonesia in 2021
    Rasya Hapsari Danardhono, Arman Yurisaldi Saleh, Ria Maria Theresa, Riezky Valentina Astari
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  • The Western Aphasia Battery: a systematic review of research and clinical applications
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  • Diaschisis: a mechanism for subcortical aphasia?
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    Journal of Neurology.2022; 269(4): 2219.     CrossRef
  • A Study of Type of Aphasia in Cortical and Subcortical Strokes
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    Journal of the Scientific Society.2022; 49(1): 55.     CrossRef
  • Enhanced left superior parietal activation during successful speech production in patients with left dorsal striatal damage and error-prone neurotypical participants
    Sharon Geva, Letitia M Schneider, Shamima Khan, Diego L Lorca-Puls, Andrea Gajardo-Vidal, Thomas M H Hope, David W Green, Cathy J Price
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  • Which is responsible for aphasia by subcortical lesions? Subcortical lesions or the cortical hypoperfusion?
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  • The contribution of white matter pathology, hypoperfusion, lesion load, and stroke recurrence to language deficits following acute subcortical left hemisphere stroke
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    Journal of Neurolinguistics.2021; 58: 100968.     CrossRef
  • Neural substrates of subcortical aphasia in subacute stroke: Voxel-based lesion symptom mapping study
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  • Determinants of life satisfaction among stroke survivors 1 year post stroke
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  • Subcortical Aphasia
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    Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Incidence and types of aphasia after first-ever acute stroke in Bengali speakers: age, gender, and educational effect on the type of aphasia
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    Aphasiology.2020; 34(6): 709.     CrossRef
  • Structural Characteristic of the Arcuate Fasciculus in Patients with Fluent Aphasia Following Intracranial Hemorrhage: A Diffusion Tensor Tractography Study
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  • The Margins of the Language Network in the Brain
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  • White matter connection's damage, not cortical activation, leading to language dysfunction of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and strokelike episodes
    Na Ye, Jing-Yi Liu, Xi-Ping Gong, Hui Qu, Ke-Hui Dong, Yan-Ling Ma, Wei-Li Jia, Zhao-Zhao Wang, Yuan-Jun Li, Yu-Mei Zhang
    Chinese Medical Journal.2019; 132(5): 597.     CrossRef
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Review Article
Vascular Dementia.
Jeong, Yong , Kang, Sue J , Na, Duk L
J Korean Acad Rehabil Med 2002;26(6):639-646.
Vascular dementia (VD) is a dementia syndrome associated with cerebrovascular disease. Among the several subtypes of VD, most common subtypes are multi-infarct dementia, single-infarct dementia, and subcortical vascular dementia. In patients with multi-infarct dementia, dementia occurs with a close temporal relationship to stroke episodes. Brain imaging usually shows multiple territory cortico-subcortical infarcts. Single-infarct dementia, in contrast, is caused by a single infarct in specific regions of the brain such as thalamus, caudate nucleus, capsular genu, angular gyrus, or hippocampus. In subcortical VD, primary lesion is lacunar infacts or ischemic white matter lesions that are located in subcortical regions, i.e., deep nuclei (basal ganglia and thalamus) or white matter (periventricular and deep white matter). The diagnosis of subcortical vascular dementia is challenging, since stroke episodes are often unrecognized, thus temporal relationship between onset of dementia and stroke is lacking. This article describes 1) subtypes of VD, 2) illustrative cases with vascular dementia, 3) research criteria for VD, 4) treatment of VD, and 5) a general guideline on caregiving for patients with VD, which will enable clinicians to provide better diagnosis and management of patients with VD. (Korean Acad Rehab Med 2002; 26: 639-646)
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