All Relations between Alzheimer Disease and Aphasia, Primary Progressive

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Seyed A Sajjadi, Julio Acosta-Cabronero, Karalyn Patterson, Lara Z Diaz-de-Grenu, Guy B Williams, Peter J Nesto. Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging for single subject diagnosis in neurodegenerative diseases. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 136. issue Pt 7. 2013-08-29. PMID:23729473. consistent with past reports for the respective clinical syndromes, these were centred on the left frontal operculum and caudate nucleus in non-fluent primary progressive aphasia (the corticobasal degeneration/progressive supranuclear palsy set), anterior temporal lobes in semantic dementia, and hippocampus and posterior cingulate gyrus in alzheimer's disease. 2013-08-29 2023-08-12 human
Scott M McGinni. Neuroimaging in neurodegenerative dementias. Seminars in neurology. vol 32. issue 4. 2013-08-12. PMID:23361481. neuroimaging techniques have contributed enormously to both our understanding of large-scale network specificity in neurodegenerative syndromes and our ability to make clinical diagnoses of syndromes such as alzheimer's disease (ad), dementia with lewy bodies (dlb), posterior cortical atrophy (pca), logopenic primary progressive aphasia (ppa), agrammatic ppa, semantic dementia (sd), behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvftd), corticobasal syndrome (cbs), and progressive supranuclear palsy syndrome (psps). 2013-08-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Manja Lehmann, Pia M Ghosh, Cindee Madison, Robert Laforce, Chiara Corbetta-Rastelli, Michael W Weiner, Michael D Greicius, William W Seeley, Maria L Gorno-Tempini, Howard J Rosen, Bruce L Miller, William J Jagust, Gil D Rabinovic. Diverging patterns of amyloid deposition and hypometabolism in clinical variants of probable Alzheimer's disease. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 136. issue Pt 3. 2013-04-23. PMID:23358601. alzheimer's disease clinical groups showed syndrome-specific (18)f-labelled fluorodeoxyglucose patterns, with greater parieto-occipital involvement in posterior cortical atrophy, and asymmetric involvement of left temporoparietal regions in logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia. 2013-04-23 2023-08-12 human
Manja Lehmann, Pia M Ghosh, Cindee Madison, Robert Laforce, Chiara Corbetta-Rastelli, Michael W Weiner, Michael D Greicius, William W Seeley, Maria L Gorno-Tempini, Howard J Rosen, Bruce L Miller, William J Jagust, Gil D Rabinovic. Diverging patterns of amyloid deposition and hypometabolism in clinical variants of probable Alzheimer's disease. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 136. issue Pt 3. 2013-04-23. PMID:23358601. the seed region of interest covariance analysis revealed distinct (18)f-labelled fluorodeoxyglucose correlation patterns that greatly overlapped with the right executive-control network for the early-onset alzheimer's disease region of interest, the left language network for the logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia region of interest, and the higher visual network for the posterior cortical atrophy region of interest. 2013-04-23 2023-08-12 human
Manja Lehmann, Pia M Ghosh, Cindee Madison, Robert Laforce, Chiara Corbetta-Rastelli, Michael W Weiner, Michael D Greicius, William W Seeley, Maria L Gorno-Tempini, Howard J Rosen, Bruce L Miller, William J Jagust, Gil D Rabinovic. Diverging patterns of amyloid deposition and hypometabolism in clinical variants of probable Alzheimer's disease. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 136. issue Pt 3. 2013-04-23. PMID:23358601. finally, (18)f-labelled fluorodeoxyglucose was similarly reduced in all alzheimer's disease variants in the dorsal and left ventral default mode network, whereas significant differences were found in the right ventral default mode, right executive-control (both lower in early-onset alzheimer's disease and posterior cortical atrophy than logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia) and higher-order visual network (lower in posterior cortical atrophy than in early-onset alzheimer's disease and logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia), with a trend towards lower (18)f-labelled fluorodeoxyglucose also found in the left language network in logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia. 2013-04-23 2023-08-12 human
Tamar Gefen, Katherine Gasho, Alfred Rademaker, Mona Lalehzari, Sandra Weintraub, Emily Rogalski, Christina Wieneke, Eileen Bigio, Changiz Geula, M-Marsel Mesula. Clinically concordant variations of Alzheimer pathology in aphasic versus amnestic dementia. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 135. issue Pt 5. 2012-06-25. PMID:22522938. the one case with reversed asymmetry, however, suggests that these concordant clinicopathological relationships are not universal and that individual primary progressive aphasia cases with alzheimer pathology exist where distributions of plaques and tangles do not account for the observed phenotype. 2012-06-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
David J Libon, Katya Rascovsky, Rachel G Gross, Matthew T White, Sharon X Xie, Michael Dreyfuss, Ashley Boller, Lauren Massimo, Peachie Moore, Jessica Kitain, H Branch Coslett, Anjan Chatterjee, Murray Grossma. The Philadelphia Brief Assessment of Cognition (PBAC): a validated screening measure for dementia. The Clinical neuropsychologist. vol 25. issue 8. 2012-04-20. PMID:22084867. a revised version of the pbac was administered to 198 participants including patients with alzheimer's disease (ad) (n=46) and four groups of patients with frontotemporal dementia (ftd) syndromes: behavioral-variant ftd (bvftd; n=65), semantic-variant primary progressive aphasia (ppa) (svppa; n=22), non-fluent/agrammatic-variant ppa (nfappa; n=23), and corticobasal syndrome (cbs; n=42), and a group of normal controls (n=15). 2012-04-20 2023-08-12 human
Mirko Bibl, Brit Mollenhauer, Piotr Lewczuk, Hermann Esselmann, Stefanie Wolf, Markus Otto, Johannes Kornhuber, Eckart Rüther, Jens Wiltfan. Cerebrospinal fluid tau, p-tau 181 and amyloid-β38/40/42 in frontotemporal dementias and primary progressive aphasias. Dementia and geriatric cognitive disorders. vol 31. issue 1. 2011-05-19. PMID:21135556. we determined cerebrospinal fluid (csf) concentrations of amyloid-β (aβ)(1-38), aβ(1-40), aβ(1-42), total tau and phospho-tau (p-tau) in order to study their differential expression in frontotemporal dementia (ftd, n = 25) and primary progressive aphasia (ppa, n = 12) as compared to alzheimer's dementia (ad, n = 25) and nondemented controls (n = 20). 2011-05-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
G Gliebus, E H Bigio, K Gasho, M Mishra, D Caplan, M-M Mesulam, C Geul. Asymmetric TDP-43 distribution in primary progressive aphasia with progranulin mutation. Neurology. vol 74. issue 20. 2010-06-02. PMID:20479359. primary progressive aphasia (ppa) results from an asymmetric degeneration of the language dominant (usually left) hemisphere and can be associated with the pathology of alzheimer disease (ad) or frontotemporal lobar degeneration (ftld). 2010-06-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
Andrea C Bozoki, Muhammad U Faroo. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration insights from neuropsychology and neuroimaging. International review of neurobiology. vol 84. 2009-08-12. PMID:19501719. we briefly review the origins of the current classification scheme for diagnosing the three major subtypes--frontotemporal dementia, semantic dementia, and primary progressive aphasia, highlighting the differences between subtypes as well as from alzheimer's disease (ad). 2009-08-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Sarah Banks, Sandra Weintrau. Self-awareness and self-monitoring of cognitive and behavioral deficits in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, primary progressive aphasia and probable Alzheimer's disease. Brain and cognition. vol 67. issue 1. 2008-08-13. PMID:18194832. self-awareness and self-monitoring of cognitive and behavioral deficits in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, primary progressive aphasia and probable alzheimer's disease. 2008-08-13 2023-08-12 human
C Marra, D Quaranta, M Zinno, S Misciagna, A Bizzarro, C Masullo, A Daniele, G Gainott. Clusters of cognitive and behavioral disorders clearly distinguish primary progressive aphasia from frontal lobe dementia, and Alzheimer's disease. Dementia and geriatric cognitive disorders. vol 24. issue 5. 2008-01-10. PMID:17851236. clusters of cognitive and behavioral disorders clearly distinguish primary progressive aphasia from frontal lobe dementia, and alzheimer's disease. 2008-01-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
David G Munoz, John Woulfe, Andrew Kertes. Argyrophilic thorny astrocyte clusters in association with Alzheimer's disease pathology in possible primary progressive aphasia. Acta neuropathologica. vol 114. issue 4. 2007-12-26. PMID:17637999. argyrophilic thorny astrocyte clusters in association with alzheimer's disease pathology in possible primary progressive aphasia. 2007-12-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
Cecile A Marczinski, Andrew Kertes. Category and letter fluency in semantic dementia, primary progressive aphasia, and Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 97. issue 3. 2006-08-03. PMID:16325251. category and letter fluency in semantic dementia, primary progressive aphasia, and alzheimer's disease. 2006-08-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Cecile A Marczinski, Andrew Kertes. Category and letter fluency in semantic dementia, primary progressive aphasia, and Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 97. issue 3. 2006-08-03. PMID:16325251. patients with semantic dementia, primary progressive aphasia, and alzheimer's disease were compared with elderly controls on tasks of category and letter fluency, with number of words generated, mean lexical frequency and errors recorded. 2006-08-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Alina Borkowska, Tomasz Sobó. [Neuropsychological assessment in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of fronto-temporal dementia]. Neurologia i neurochirurgia polska. vol 39. issue 6. 2006-07-25. PMID:16355304. clinical diagnosis of fronto-temporal dementia (ftd) and its rare variants (semantic dementia and primary progressive aphasia) represents a special challenge bearing in mind its difficulties and is important due to therapeutic differences with the most common alzheimer's dementia. 2006-07-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Elio Scarpini, Daniela Galimberti, Ilaria Guidi, Nereo Bresolin, Philip Schelten. Progressive, isolated language disturbance: its significance in a 65-year-old-man. A case report with implications for treatment and review of literature. Journal of the neurological sciences. vol 240. issue 1-2. 2006-03-29. PMID:16249006. language disturbances are common features occurring in different neurodegenerative diseases, including alzheimer's disease (ad) and the frontotemporal lobar degeneration (ftld) variants primary progressive aphasia (ppa) and semantic dementia (sd). 2006-03-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
Xiaohong Li, Lewis P Rowland, Hiroshi Mitsumoto, Serge Przedborski, Thomas D Bird, Gerard D Schellenberg, Elaine Peskind, Nancy Johnson, Teepu Siddique, M-Marsel Mesulam, Sandra Weintraub, James A Mastriann. Prion protein codon 129 genotype prevalence is altered in primary progressive aphasia. Annals of neurology. vol 58. issue 6. 2006-01-31. PMID:16315279. we conducted a case-control study to compare the prnp codon 129 genotype distribution in alzheimer's disease (ad), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (als), and primary progressive aphasia (ppa), including 281 ad, 256 als, 39 ppa, and 415 healthy control subjects. 2006-01-31 2023-08-12 human
R Vandenbergh. Language, ageing and neurodegenerative disease. Bulletin et memoires de l'Academie royale de medecine de Belgique. vol 159. issue Pt 2. 2005-07-25. PMID:15615088. neurodegenerative disease: we will contrast two patient groups: patients with a progressive word finding and semantic memory deficit (primary progressive aphasia, most often due to frontotemporal degeneration) and patients with an isolated episodic memory deficit (incipient alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment). 2005-07-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Richard J Caselli, Thomas G Beach, Lucia I Sue, Donald J Connor, Marwan N Sabbag. Progressive aphasia with Lewy bodies. Dementia and geriatric cognitive disorders. vol 14. issue 2. 2002-09-26. PMID:12145451. dementia with lewy bodies (dlb) may include both alzheimer and lewy body pathology, but has never been reported to cause primary progressive aphasia. 2002-09-26 2023-08-12 Not clear