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Normalisation and increase of abnormal ERP patterns accompany recovery from aphasia in the post-acute stage

Electrophysiological correlates of recovery from anomia were analysed in four aphasic patients in the post-acute stage. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded during picture naming at baseline and after a period of therapy for anomia. All patients had severe anomia at baseline assessment and...

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Published in:Neuropsychologia 2008-01, Vol.46 (8), p.2265-2273
Main Authors: Laganaro, Marina, Morand, Stéphanie, Schwitter, Valérie, Zimmermann, Carmel, Schnider, Armin
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description Electrophysiological correlates of recovery from anomia were analysed in four aphasic patients in the post-acute stage. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded during picture naming at baseline and after a period of therapy for anomia. All patients had severe anomia at baseline assessment and improved significantly in naming during the study period. Waveform analyses and temporal segmentation were carried out on the ERPs of each patient in comparison with 15 healthy control subjects. Normalisation as well as an increase of abnormal electrophysiological correlates accompanied recovery. An increase of abnormal amplitudes appeared in a patient with semantic impairment during the first 300 ms after picture onset, while only normalisation of amplitudes and topographic maps accompanied recovery in the three patients with lexical–phonological impairment in this early time-window. Abnormal amplitudes and topographic maps emerged during recovery in the patients with lexical–phonological impairment in later time-windows, starting between 250 and 300 ms. Follow-up ERP recordings carried out 6 months later in two of them showed normalisation of amplitudes and persistence of abnormal maps. The results suggest that electrophysiological changes accompanying recovery from anomia in the post-acute stage are observed in specific time-windows, probably corresponding to different encoding processes and that recovery correlates with normalisation of EEG patterns as well as with the emergence of abnormalities, which presumably indicates compensation mechanisms of specific encoding processes.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2008.02.013
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subjects Adult
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Aged
Anomia
Aphasia
Aphasia - physiopathology
Aphasia - rehabilitation
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Mapping
Disorders of higher nervous function. Focal brain diseases. Central vestibular syndrome and deafness. Brain stem syndromes
Electroencephalography - methods
ERP
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Functional Laterality
Humans
Language and communication disorders
Language Therapy - methods
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Nervous system (semeiology, syndromes)
Neurology
Organic mental disorders. Neuropsychology
Psycholinguistics
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Recovery
Recovery of Function - physiology
Reference Values
title Normalisation and increase of abnormal ERP patterns accompany recovery from aphasia in the post-acute stage
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