77 - Cerebral Cortical Function Flashcards
Which hemisphere of the brain is typically the dominant in terms of language? Which is non-dominant?
Most common
- Right = non-dominant
- Left = dominant
What anatomical (not functional) difference is there between the right and left hemispheres?
Anatomical difference: planum temporal is larger in the left hemisphere than in the right in most human brains.
Describe the non-dominant hemisphere
- usually right hemisphere
- usually superior in spatial abilities, the comprehension of complicated patterns. Example: 3-dimensional puzzles
- control of affective components of language: prosodic elements
What are the functions of non-dominant hemisphere (usually right brain)?
- Analysis of left visual field
- Stereognosis (left hand)
- Emotional coloring of language
- Spatial abilities
- Rudientary speech
What are the functions of the dominant hemisphere (usually left brain)?
- Analysis of right visual field
- Stereogosis (right hand)
- Lexical and synatactic language
- Writing
- Speech
What is an aphasia?
Aphasia: acquired disorder of language due to brain damage
Describe Broca’s aphasia
- classified as a nonfluent aphasia
- Patient has limited speech but it is slow and labored with nonessential words omitted (telegraphic speech)
- Patient can comprehend single words and grammatically simple sentences.
- Impaired repetition
- Patients are aware of their language difficulties and very frustrated and upset by it.
What causes Broca’s aphasia?
- Caused by lesions in Brodmann areas 44 and 45 in milder Broca’s area aphasia. Broca’s aphasia is caused by more extensive damage that includes additional areas surrounding and deep to Broca’s area (including insula cortex and part of the basal ganglia).
Describe Wernicke’s aphasia
- Patient with severe form of Wernicke’s aphasia cannot understand either spoken or written language but they display fluent paraphasic speech. Speech sometimes called word salad.
- Less severely affected patients use many paraphasias; patient may use an incorrect but similar sounding word.
- Patients with Wernicke’s aphasia seem much less aware of their problems than patients with Broca’s aphasia.
What causes Wernicke’s aphasia?
Usually caused in part by lesions in Brodmann area 22 in the posterior part of the temporal gyrus . Patients with Wernicke’s aphasia can also have damage in area 37, 39 and 40 so not just caused by damage to the temporal lobe.
What is conduction aphasia?
Comprehension can be normal for simple sentences and speech is fluent but patient uses many paraphasias. Ability to repeat what is heard is lost.
What causes conduction aphasia?
Caused by interruption of the connections between Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas. Damage is to complex connection system not just the arcuate fasciculus.
What is global aphasia?
- Most severe form of aphasia
- Patients cannot produce understandable speech or comprehend spoken language or written language.
- May still have “automatic” speech such as stock expletives, and reciting days of the week or counting. Some patients can sing previously learned songs including melody and lyrics
What causes global aphasia?
Global aphasia may often be seen immediately after the patient has suffered a stroke and it may rapidly improve if the damage has not been too extensive. However, with greater brain damage, severe and lasting disability may result.
What causes neglect syndrome
- Damage to posterior parietal lobe in non-dominant hemisphere (usually right hemisphere) causes neglect syndrome
- Contralateral neglect syndrome is broken down into different kinds of neglect
What is personal neglect syndrome?
Occurs with damage to right hemisphere
• deficit in self-image of left side of body
• patients might not wash or dress affected side
• patients might deny left arm or leg is part of them
What is spatial neglect?
- sensory neglect of extra personal space on one side
* problem copying left side of drawing
What is representational neglect?
- neglect of one half of a remembered image
* evidence memory for extra personal space is stored with a body-centered frame of reference
What do we know about neglect from parietal lobe damage?
Neglect from parietal lobe damage consistent with many studies showing that the parietal lobe contains attention sensitive neurons.
What is asomatognosis?
When patient has lack of awareness of the condition of all or part of his body
Verbal asomatognosia is when patient verbally denies for example that his arm belongs to him
What is asterognosis?
a. inability to identify objects by feeling them
b. can be caused by lesions in somatosensory cortices in parietal lobe
c. Agnosia-is general term for the inability to recognize objects by a particular sensory modality even though sensory modality itself is intact.
What is affective language?
The components of language that express emotion
Prosodic elements
i. Emotional voice quality/intonation of speech
ii. Emotional gesturing
What hemisphere is responsible for affective components of language
Under control by “non-dominant” hemisphere (typically right)
Who was a famous patient with prefrontal lobe syndrome?
Phineas P. Gage was a famous patient with frontal lobe damage
What are the three kinds of prefrontal dysfunction?
Based on the area affected
- dorsolateral prefrontal area
- orbitofrontal area
- medial frontal/anterior cingulate area
Describe damage to the dorsolateral prefrontal area
Patients have trouble with executive functions; planning, choosing goals, monitoring the execution of a plan. They do very poorly on Wisconsin Card sorting task, tendency to perseverate.
Describe damage to the orbitofrontal area
Patients have disinhibition; they ignore social conventions, are impulsive and unconcerned about consequences.
Describe damage to the medial frontal/anterior cingulate area
Patients display apathy and slowing of cognition. This apathy can cause abulia or even akinetic mutism.
What is abulia?
Abulia is the loss or impairment of the ability to perform voluntary actions and make decisions.
What is akinetic mutism?
patient does not move or speak even though they are awake.
What are frontal release signs?
release of “primitive” reflexes examples-suckling reflex, grasp reflex, these sometimes called frontal release signs.
What is preservation?
Tendency to continue with one form of behavior when situation would require new, changed response
Describe the features of prefrontal syndrome
- personality changes including loss of a sense of social propriety and sense of responsibility
- planning deficits
- perseveration- tendency to continue with one form of behavior when situation would require new, changed response
- release of “primitive” reflexes examples-suckling reflex, grasp reflex, these sometimes called frontal release signs.
- lack of ambition
- akinetic mutism-patient can become motionless and mute even though patient could move and talk if he “wanted” to. Patient is profoundly apathetic. Patient can be less severely affected showing a lesser decrease in will or motivation (abulia).