Apraxic agraphia with neglect-induced paragraphia. Valenstein, E. & Heilman, K. Archives of Neurology, 36(8):506–508, 1979.
Paper doi abstract bibtex Agraphia may result from the loss or unavailability of the memory of movements necessary to form written letters. For this mechanism to be invoked, it must first be demonstrated that there is no language deficit and that there is no disconnection between language and motor areas. A left-handed patient demonstrated bilateral agraphia and apraxia, but not aphasia, following a right parietal infarction. Preservation of the ability to type with the left hand demonstrated that the right hemisphere was not disconnected from language input. In addition, paragraphic errors while typing were shown to be secondary to left hemispatial neglect.
@article{valenstein_apraxic_1979,
title = {Apraxic agraphia with neglect-induced paragraphia},
volume = {36},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=508164},
doi = {10/dxgj66},
abstract = {Agraphia may result from the loss or unavailability of the memory of movements necessary to form written letters. For this mechanism to be invoked, it must first be demonstrated that there is no language deficit and that there is no disconnection between language and motor areas. A left-handed patient demonstrated bilateral agraphia and apraxia, but not aphasia, following a right parietal infarction. Preservation of the ability to type with the left hand demonstrated that the right hemisphere was not disconnected from language input. In addition, paragraphic errors while typing were shown to be secondary to left hemispatial neglect.},
number = {8},
journal = {Archives of Neurology},
author = {Valenstein, E. and Heilman, K.M.},
year = {1979},
keywords = {Aged, Agraphia/*physiopathology, Apraxias/*physiopathology, Cerebral Infarction/physiopathology, Dominance, Cerebral, Humans, Male, Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.},
pages = {506--508},
}
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