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Observations placeholder

A case of evolving post-ictal language disturbance secondary to a left temporal arteriovenous malformation: jargon aphasia or formal thought disorder

Identifier

026099

Type of Spiritual Experience

Hallucination

Number of hallucinations: 1

Background

A description of the experience

Cogn Neuropsychiatry. 2006 Sep;11(5):465-79.

A case of evolving post-ictal language disturbance secondary to a left temporal arteriovenous malformation: jargon aphasia or formal thought disorder?

Zeman A1, Carson A, Rivers C, Nath U.

Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Western General Hospital, Crewe Road South, Edinburgh, UK. az@skull.dcn.ed.ac.uk

Abstract

INTRODUCTION:

Wernicke's dysphasia and formal thought disorder are regarded as distinct diagnostic entities although both are linked to pathology in the left superior temporal gyrus (STG). We describe a patient with focal pathology in the left STG, giving rise acutely to a fluent dysphasia, which gradually evolved into formal thought disorder.

METHOD:

Clinical, neuropsychological, neuropsychiatric, and neuroradiological assessment.

RESULTS:

A right-handed patient, AJ, presented acutely with a fluent dysphasia. His speech output gradually evolved from undifferentiated jargon, through neologistic jargon, to an intelligible but bizarre form of discourse. Comprehension was relatively well preserved. Radiology revealed an arteriovenous malformation in the left middle, and inferior temporal gyri, with reduced perfusion of the left STG. Six months later his overt dysphasia had recovered, but his speech retained some of its previous characteristics, in particular a tendency to a loose association of ideas which now suggested a disorder of thought.

CONCLUSIONS:

AJ's case illustrates that comprehension may be unexpectedly preserved in jargon aphasia, and that an overtly linguistic impairment can gradually evolve to an apparent disorder of thought. Indistinguishable formal thought disorders can result from "structural" and "functional" pathology in the dominant temporal lobe.

PMID:  17354082

The source of the experience

PubMed

Concepts, symbols and science items

Concepts

Symbols

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

Activities

Overloads

Aphasia

Suppressions

Brain damage

Commonsteps

Hearing voices

References