2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jalz.2012.05.1654
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O4‐04‐03: Logopenic aphasia in Alzheimer's disease: Clinical variant or clinical feature?

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…This suggests that these features are common in patients with AD. At odds with these findings is a report that language characteristics in early-stage AD are distinct from logopenic aphasia [35]. The seemingly conflicting findings are likely to reflect differences in age at onset of the patient populations.…”
Section: Logopenic Variant Ppamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…This suggests that these features are common in patients with AD. At odds with these findings is a report that language characteristics in early-stage AD are distinct from logopenic aphasia [35]. The seemingly conflicting findings are likely to reflect differences in age at onset of the patient populations.…”
Section: Logopenic Variant Ppamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Dans une é tude avec confirmation neuropathologique du diagnostic de maladie d'Alzheimer, les troubles du langage observé s chez des patients atteints de maladie d'Alzheimer typique (amné sique au stade dé mentiel) sur une tâ che de production langagiè re à partir de la description d'une scè ne visuelle complexe (« le voleur de cookies ») ne remplissent pas les critè res langagiers du syndrome logopé nique [50]. Un tiers des cas n'avaient pas de troubles langagiers (6 cas sur 18).…”
Section: Particularite´s Linguistiquesunclassified
“…Owing to the limitations of the rating scale when using small language samples, however, we excluded the semantic indices from the schedule used in our early AD group (cf. Ahmed et al 2012 for full details).…”
Section: Profiles Of Connected Speech In Early Alzheimer's Disease: Amentioning
confidence: 99%