Disruption of residual reading capacity in a pure alexic patient after a mirror-image right-hemispheric lesion

Neurology
P BartolomeoF Boller

Abstract

A 74-year-old woman became a letter-by-letter reader after the occurrence of a left occipito-temporal hematoma. Seven months later, she suffered a second, mirror-image hematoma in the right hemisphere. After this second lesion, her residual reading capacity deteriorated dramatically in terms of both accuracy and reading latencies for words and isolated letters. Our findings support the hypothesis that the right hemisphere contributes to the residual reading capacities of pure alexic patients.

References

Apr 1, 1989·Brain : a Journal of Neurology·H B Coslett, E M Saffran
Mar 1, 1997·Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior·N BeschinR H Logie

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Citations

Feb 18, 2004·Brain and Language·Michal Lavidor, Vincent Walsh
Mar 12, 2013·Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior·Paolo BartolomeoMichel Thiebaut de Schotten
Apr 5, 2002·Neuropsychologia·Paolo BartolomeoJean-Denis Degos
Jul 20, 2007·Human Brain Mapping·Martin KronbichlerGunther Ladurner
Sep 8, 2004·Neuropsychologia·Laurent CohenSophie Ferrieux
Oct 28, 2017·Cognitive Neuropsychology·Simon Fischer-Baum, Giulia Campana

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