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Speech and oral motor profile after childhood hemispherectomy

Hemispherectomy (disconnection or removal of an entire cerebral hemisphere) is a rare surgical procedure used for the relief of drug-resistant epilepsy in children. After hemispherectomy, contralateral hemiplegia persists whereas gross expressive and receptive language functions can be remarkably sp...

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Published in:Brain and language 2010-08, Vol.114 (2), p.126-134
Main Authors: Liégeois, Frédérique, Morgan, Angela T., Stewart, Lorna H., Helen Cross, J., Vogel, Adam P., Vargha-Khadem, Faraneh
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description Hemispherectomy (disconnection or removal of an entire cerebral hemisphere) is a rare surgical procedure used for the relief of drug-resistant epilepsy in children. After hemispherectomy, contralateral hemiplegia persists whereas gross expressive and receptive language functions can be remarkably spared. Motor speech deficits have rarely been examined systematically, thus limiting the accuracy of postoperative prognosis. We describe the speech profiles of hemispherectomized participants characterizing their intelligibility, articulation, phonological speech errors, dysarthric features, and execution and sequencing of orofacial speech and non-speech movements. Thirteen participants who had undergone hemispherectomy (six left, seven right; nine with congenital, four with acquired hemiplegia; operated between four months and 13 years) were investigated. Results showed that all participants were intelligible but showed a mild dysarthric profile characterized by neuromuscular asymmetry and reduced quality and coordination of movements, features that are characteristic of adult-onset unilateral upper motor neuron dysarthria, flaccid-ataxic variant. In addition, one left and four right hemispherectomy cases presented with impaired production of speech and non-speech sequences. No participant showed evidence of verbal or oral dyspraxia. It is concluded that mild dysarthria is persistent after left or right hemispherectomy, irrespective of age at onset of hemiplegia. These results indicate incomplete functional re-organization for the control of fine speech motor movements throughout childhood, and provide no evidence of hemispheric differences.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.bandl.2009.12.004
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source ScienceDirect Journals; ERIC; Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
subjects Adolescent
Articulation (Speech)
Brain Hemisphere Functions
Child
Child, Preschool
Children
Dysarthria
Dysarthria - etiology
Dysarthria - physiopathology
Epilepsy
Epilepsy - surgery
Error Patterns
Expressive Language
Female
Hemiplegia - etiology
Hemiplegia - physiopathology
Hemispherectomy
Humans
Infant
Language Acquisition
Language Development
Male
Neurological Impairments
Neuronal Plasticity - physiology
Oral Language
Phonology
Plasticity
Postoperative Complications - physiopathology
Profiles
Psychomotor Skills
Receptive Language
Recovery of Function - physiology
Speech
Speech - physiology
Speech Articulation Tests
Speech Intelligibility - physiology
Speech Perception - physiology
Surgery
Young Adult
title Speech and oral motor profile after childhood hemispherectomy
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