Behavioural Neurology (Jan 2006)

An Overview on Primary Progressive Aphasia and Its Variants

  • Serena Amici,
  • Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini,
  • Jennifer M. Ogar,
  • Nina F. Dronkers,
  • Bruce L. Miller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2006/260734
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
pp. 77 – 87

Abstract

Read online

We present a review of the literature on Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA) together with the analysis of neuropschychological and neuroradiologic profiles of 42 PPA patients. Mesulam originally defined PPA as a progressive degenerative disorder characterized by isolated language impairment for at least two years. The most common variants of PPA are: (1) Progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA), (2) semantic dementia (SD), (3) logopenic progressive aphasia (LPA). PNFA is characterized by labored speech, agrammatism in production, and/or comprehension. In some cases the syndrome begins with isolated deficits in speech. SD patients typically present with loss of word and object meaning and surface dyslexia. LPA patients have word-finding difficulties, syntactically simple but accurate language output and impaired sentence comprehension. The neuropsychological data demonstrated that SD patients show the most characteristic pattern of impairment, while PNFA and LPA overlap within many cognitive domains. The neuroimaging analysis showed left perisylvian region involvement. A comprehensive cognitive, neuroimaging and pathological approach is necessary to identify the clinical and pathogenetic features of different PPA variants.