Crossed Aphasia in a Patient with Anaplastic Astrocytoma of the Non-Dominant Hemisphere

Authors

  • Stephanie Prater
  • Neil Anand
  • lawrence wei
  • Neil Horner

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v11i9.3154

Keywords:

Broca, Aphasia, Tumor, Neoplasm, White Matter, MRI, fMRI, Functional, Anaplastic, Astrocytoma, Wernicke

Abstract

Aphasia describes a spectrum of speech impairments due to damage in the language centers of the brain. Insult to the inferior frontal gyrus of the dominant cerebral hemisphere results in Broca's aphasia - the inability to produce fluent speech. The left cerebral hemisphere has historically been considered the dominant side, a characteristic long presumed to be related to a person's "handedness". However, recent studies utilizing fMRI have shown that right hemispheric dominance occurs more frequently than previously proposed and despite a person's handedness. Here we present a case of a right-handed patient with Broca's aphasia caused by a right-sided brain tumor. This is significant not only because the occurrence of aphasia in right-handed-individuals with right hemispheric brain damage (so-called "crossed aphasia") is unusual but also because such findings support dissociation between hemispheric linguistic dominance and handedness.

Author Biographies

Stephanie Prater

PGY 2 - Radiology Resident

Neil Anand

PGY3 - Radiology Resident

lawrence wei

4th year medical student

Neil Horner

Section Cheif - Neuroradiology - Overlook Medical Center

Published

2017-09-25

Issue

Section

Neuroradiology