超皮質性運動性失語
WordNet
- machine that converts other forms of energy into mechanical energy and so imparts motion
- a nonspecific agent that imparts motion; "happiness is the aim of all men and the motor of all action"
- inability to use or understand language (spoken or written) because of a brain lesion
- the act of driving an automobile
PrepTutorEJDIC
- (電気の)『モーター』,電動機 / エンジン,(特に)内燃機関 / 《英》自動車(motorcar) / 《名詞の前にのみ用いて》 / モーターの;エンジンの;自動車の / モーター(エンジン)による,自動車による / (神経・筋肉について)運動の / 自動車で行く / …‘を'自動車で運ぶ
- 失語症
- 自動車運転〈技術〉,ドライブ
- 気のきいた言葉
Wikipedia preview
出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2015/08/10 07:26:19」(JST)
[Wiki en表示]
Main article: Aphasia
Transcortical Motor Aphasia (TMA), also known as adynamic aphasia and extrasylvian motor aphasia, results from an injury to the anterior superior frontal lobe. The injury is typically caused by a cerebrovascular accident (CVA), commonly referred to as a stroke. The area of insult is sometimes referred to as a watershed area, a region receiving dual blood supply that is the first to become ischemic during a stroke. The insult typically involves the left hemisphere as most people (regardless of handedness) are left hemisphere dominant for language (nearly 100% of right-handers, about 85% of left-handers). [1]
Characteristics
TMA is a less common impairment than Expressive aphasia. People with TMA generally have good comprehension since Wernicke's area is usually not affected. People with TMA experience non-fluent (halting and effortful) speech due to frontal lobe damage and their utterances are typically only one or two words long. People with TMA retain the ability to repeat words, phrases or sentences. Repetition is preserved since the arcuate fasciculus (the neural pathway that connects Wernicke’s and Broca’s areas via the parietal lobe) is intact.[citation needed] Preserved repetition is a defining quality of all transcortical aphasias. People who suffer from transcortical motor aphasia, however, may experience delays in initiation when they try to repeat words due to damage in the frontal lobe.
People who suffer from TMA also have severely impaired writing ability. As writing is a secondary modality (learned through formal instruction in grade school) it is often more severely affected than a primary modality like speaking.
See also
- Transcortical sensory aphasia
References
- ^ "Anatomic basis of transcortical motor aphasia -- Freedman et al. 34 (4): 409 -- Neurology". www.neurology.org. Retrieved 2008-05-11.
Symptoms and signs: Speech and voice / Symptoms involving head and neck (R47–R49, 784)
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Aphasias |
- Acute Aphasias
- Expressive aphasia
- Receptive aphasia
- Conduction aphasia
- Anomic aphasia
- Global aphasia
- Transcortical sensory aphasia
- Transcortical motor aphasia
- Mixed transcortical aphasia
- Progressive Aphasias
- Progressive nonfluent aphasia
- Semantic dementia
- Logopenic progressive aphasia
- Speech disturbances
- Speech disorder
- Developmental verbal dyspraxia/Apraxia of speech
- Auditory verbal agnosia
- Dysarthria
- Schizophasia
- Aprosodia/Dysprosody
- Specific language impairment
- Thought disorder
- Pressure of speech
- Derailment
- Clanging
- Circumstantiality
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Communication disorders |
- Developmental dyslexia/Alexia
- Agnosia
- Astereognosis
- Prosopagnosia
- Visual agnosia
- Gerstmann syndrome
- Developmental coordination disorder/Apraxia
- Dyscalculia/Acalculia
- Agraphia
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Voice disturbances |
- Dysphonia/Aphonia
- Bogart–Bacall syndrome
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Nose |
- Post-nasal drip
- Epistaxis
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Mouth |
- Orofacial pain
- Toothache
- Galvanic pain
- Barodontalgia
- Fremitus
- Tooth mobility
- Bruxism
- Trismus
- Ageusia
- Hypogeusia
- Dysgeusia
- Parageusia
- Hypergeusia
- Xerostomia
- Halitosis
- Drooling
- Hypersalivation
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Neck |
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Other |
- Headache
- Auditory processing disorder
- Otalgia
- Velopharyngeal inadequacy
- Velopharyngeal insufficiency
- Hypersensitive gag reflex
- Jaw claudication
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Index of psychology and psychiatry
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Description |
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Disorders |
- Mental and behavioral
- Mood
- Developmental
- pervasive
- dyslexia and specific
- Substance-related
- Emotional and behavioral
- Symptoms and signs
- Evaluation and testing
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Treatment |
- Psychotherapy
- Drugs
- depression
- antipsychotics
- anxiety
- dementia
- hypnotics and sedatives
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Index of the mouth
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Description |
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Disease |
- Congenital
- face and neck
- cleft
- digestive system
- Neoplasms and cancer
- Other
- Symptoms and signs
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Treatment |
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Lesions of spinal cord and brain
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Spinal cord/
vascular myelopathy |
- sensory: Sensory ataxia
- Tabes dorsalis
- motor: Motor neurone disease
- mixed: Brown-Séquard syndrome
- cord syndrome (Posterior
- Anterior
- Central/Syringomyelia)
- Subacute combined degeneration of spinal cord (B12)
- Cauda equina syndrome
- Anterior spinal artery syndrome
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Brainstem |
Medulla (CN 8, 9, 10, 12) |
- Lateral medullary syndrome/Wallenberg
- Medial medullary syndrome/Dejerine
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Pons (CN 5, 6, 7, 8) |
- Upper dorsal pontine syndrome/Raymond Céstan syndrome
- Lateral pontine syndrome (AICA) (lateral)
- Medial pontine syndrome/Millard-Gubler syndrome/Foville's syndrome(basilar)
- Locked-in syndrome
- Internuclear ophthalmoplegia
- One and a half syndrome
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Midbrain (CN 3, 4) |
- Weber's syndrome
- Benedikt syndrome
- Parinaud's syndrome
- Nothnagel's syndrome
- Claude's syndrome
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Other |
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Cerebellum |
- lateral (Dysmetria
- Dysdiadochokinesia
- Intention tremor)
- medial (Cerebellar ataxia)
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Basal ganglia |
- Chorea
- Dystonia
- Parkinson's disease
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Cortex |
- ACA syndrome
- MCA syndrome
- PCA syndrome
- frontal lobe: Expressive aphasia
- Abulia
- parietal lobe: Receptive aphasia
- Hemispatial neglect
- Gerstmann syndrome
- Astereognosis
- occipital lobe: Bálint's syndrome
- Cortical blindness
- Pure alexia
- temporal lobe: Cortical deafness
- Prosopagnosia
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Thalamus |
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Other |
- Subclavian steal syndrome
- Upper motor neurone lesion (Clasp-knife response)
- Lower motor neurone lesion
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Index of the central nervous system
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Description |
- Anatomy
- meninges
- cortex
- association fibers
- commissural fibers
- lateral ventricles
- basal ganglia
- diencephalon
- mesencephalon
- pons
- cerebellum
- medulla
- spinal cord
- Physiology
- Development
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Disease |
- Cerebral palsy
- Meningitis
- Demyelinating diseases
- Seizures and epilepsy
- Headache
- Stroke
- Sleep
- Congenital
- Injury
- Neoplasms and cancer
- Other
- Symptoms and signs
- head and neck
- eponymous
- lesions
- Tests
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Treatment |
- Procedures
- Drugs
- general anesthetics
- analgesics
- addiction
- epilepsy
- cholinergics
- migraine
- Parkinson's
- vertigo
- other
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UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- Script Training Using Telepractice with Two Adults with Chronic Non-Fluent Aphasia.
- Rhodes NC, Isaki E.
- International journal of telerehabilitation. 2018 ;10(2)89-104.
- Two male participants with chronic (> 2 years), non-fluent aphasia and their family members participated in script training using videoconferencing. Functional scripts were developed by people with aphasia (PWA) and their family members. Accuracy of scripts was measured by total target words produce
- PMID 30588280
- Recurring Thalamic Symptoms Due to Intracranial Dural Arteriovenous Fistula: Report of Unusual Case and Treatment Outcome.
- Vinayagamani S, Kannath SK, Rajan JE.
- World neurosurgery. 2018 Oct;118()9-13.
- Initial clinical presentation of dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF) with predominantly thalamic symptoms is rare and has not been reported until now. A young child presenting with complaints of tinnitus and mild right hemiparesis was evaluated with an initial magnetic resonance imaging, which reveal
- PMID 29969738
- Sentence composition ability in two patients with non-fluent/agrammatic variant primary progressive aphasia.
- Watanabe H, Matsuda M, Ota S, Baba T, Iizuka O, Mori E.
- Psychogeriatrics : the official journal of the Japanese Psychogeriatric Society. 2018 May;18(3)231-234.
- Agrammatism is one of the core clinical features of non-fluent/agrammatic variant primary progressive aphasia, and it has traditionally been considered the hallmark of non-fluent aphasia in Western countries. However, agrammatic speech may remain undetected in Japanese patients because of the agglut
- PMID 29409157
Japanese Journal
- Baló's Concentric Sclerosis in Multiple Sclerosis
- Barun Barbara,Adamec Ivan,Habek Mario
- Internal Medicine 51(15), 2065-2066, 2012
- NAID 130002062284
- メロディック・イントネーション・セラピーにより十分な改善が認められなかった超皮質性運動失語の1例
- 松田 実
- 高次脳機能研究 : 日本高次脳機能障害学会誌 = Higher brain function research 27(2), 139-147, 2007-06-30
- NAID 10026936124
Related Links
- Transcortical motor aphasia Transcortical motor aphasia is different than Broca's aphasia in that repetition ability is intact. Patients who demonstrate transcortical motor ahasia have the same halting, agrammatic speech of Broca's ...
- The name “transcortical motor aphasia” has been used to refer to two different types of language alterations: damage in the left supplementary motor area an ... Ardila, 1983 A. Ardila Aphasia resulting from damage in left ...
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