Nineteen moderately impaired patients with clinically definite multiple sclerosis and an initially relapsing-remitting course were included in a neuropsychological and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) follow-up study. The average test/re-test interval was about 2 years. The neuropsychological findings were indicative of a very mild overall impairment; the patients, as a group, showed no evidence of cognitive deterioration in the follow-up period. A numerical estimation of the severity of cerebral demyelination shown by MRI did not indicate a significant change. No correlation between cognitive performance variations and MRI changes was found.
Liberini and his colleagues raise interesting points in their account of the incidence of conversion pseudodementia. Within the UK, con version hysteria is generally thought to be rare, es pecially in older people. A benefit of increasing interchange between European psychiatrists will be the challenging of national diagnostic customs by epidemiological evidence.
We review most of the work published, to our knowledge, between 1880 and 1988 on aphasia due to right cerebral lesions in right-handed patients ("crossed aphasia"). We summarize the 87 cases found in chronological order within defined groups, dealing in greater detail with the less well-known cases in English-language publications and with the cases from other sources that we consider most representative and convincing. The 87 cases fall into three groups on the following criteria: right-handedness (on standardized tests), absence of left-handers in the family, left hemisphere integrity. Group 1 comprises cases that are unreliable because the handedness data are missing and/or because left hemisphere lesions were known to be present or probably were so. Group 2 comprises cases with full clinical data but no formal test of handedness, with familial cases of left-handedness and/or without satisfactory evidence of left hemisphere integrity. Groups 3 comprises the 26 reliable cases, that is those with proven right-handedness, no left-handers in the family and with proven hemisphere integrity. We discuss the implications of these cases.
We describe a 65-year-old right-handed (on the Edinburgh Inventory Test) woman who developed left hemiplegia and language disturbances after right hemisphere lesion. She showed global aphasia and left spatial neglect. To our knowledge, this is the first case of so called "crossed aphasia" in which the integrity of the left hemisphere is assessed by Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). The association of aphasia and neglect is briefly discussed.
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