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(Stroke. 2003;34:2900.)
© 2003 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From INSERM U455 (D.C., J.-F.D., X de B., N.M.), Federation de Neurologie (M.P.), and PET Centre (D.C., J.-F.D.), University Hospital Purpan, Toulouse, France; Department of Neurology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK (J.-C.B.); Department of Neurology "Déjerine" (Pr Defer), University Hospital of Caen, Equipe Universitaire-Université de Basse Normandie, Caen, France (R.-M.M.); INSERM U 320, Centre Cyceron, Caen, France (R.-M.M., J.-C.B.); and Department of Neurology "Vastel" (Pr Viader), University Hospital of Caen, Caen, France (J.L.).
Correspondence to D. Cardebat, INSERM U455, Fédération de Neurologie, CHU Purpan, 31059 Toulouse Cedex 3, France. E-mail cardebat{at}toulouse.inserm.fr
Background and Purpose Follow-up neuroimaging studies of aphasia never addressed a comparison between aphasic and healthy subjects. Investigation of changes over time in healthy subjects during language tasks seems a prerequisite before interpretation of longitudinal changes in aphasic patients.
Methods Six healthy subjects and 8 aphasic patients were PET scanned twice (PET1 and PET2) at a 1-year interval during a word generation task. Using SPM99, language-rest main effect was compared at PET1 and PET2 in each group, whereas group effect was assessed at each session. Correlations were analyzed in each group between performance indexes and changes in regional cerebral flood flow (rCBF) between the 2 sessions.
Results Language performances were improved in both groups. rCBF decreased from PET1 to PET2 in the healthy group and increased in the aphasic group in perisylvian regions bilaterally. Correlations between performance and rCBF changes across sessions were similar in the 2 groups; positive correlations involved superior temporal cortexes bilaterally, and negative correlations concerned superior frontal and medial temporal regions.
Conclusions Increased perisylvian activation over time probably reflects improved performance at the expenses of cognitive effort in aphasic patients. Decreased activation in different neural systems suggests a familiarization effect with reduced emotional load.
Key Words: follow-up studies language stroke tomography, emission computed
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