All Relations between Aphasia, Primary Progressive and semantics

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
H Tanab. Clinical concept of frontotemporal dementia. Neuropathology : official journal of the Japanese Society of Neuropathology. vol 20. issue 1. 2000-09-06. PMID:10935440. these include dementia of the frontal lobe type, slowly progressive aphasia without dementia or primary progressive aphasia, semantic dementia and frontotemporal lobar degeneration. 2000-09-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Didic, O Felician, M Ceccaldi, M Ponce. [Progressive focal cortical atrophies]. Revue neurologique. vol 155 Suppl 4. 2000-02-22. PMID:10637941. several focal cortical syndromes with deficits in the realm of cognition are reviewed: progressive impairment of language (primary progressive aphasia), speech (progressive anarthria), semantic memory (semantic dementia), episodic memory (pure progressive amnesia), vision (progressive perceptual or visuo-spatial deficits) and gesture (progressive apraxia). 2000-02-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Didic, O Felician, M Ceccaldi, M Ponce. [Progressive focal cortical atrophies]. Revue neurologique. vol 155 Suppl 4. 2000-02-22. PMID:10637941. non-fluent primary progressive aphasia, semantic dementia and progressive anarthria are usually associated with non-specific lesions and pick-type pathology. 2000-02-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
F Pasquie. Early diagnosis of dementia: neuropsychology. Journal of neurology. vol 246. issue 1. 1999-06-15. PMID:9987708. we review the global tools, the memory tests that describe the memory profile and indicate the underlying pathology, the assessment of other cognitive functions, and the neuropsychological patterns of typical alzheimer's disease, frontotemporal dementia, primary progressive aphasia, semantic dementia, lewy body dementia, subcortical dementia, and vascular dementia. 1999-06-15 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Schwarz, R De Bleser, K Poeck, J Wei. A case of primary progressive aphasia. A 14-year follow-up study with neuropathological findings. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 121 ( Pt 1). 1998-05-08. PMID:9549492. whereas some authors have emphasized non-fluency as a defining characteristic of primary progressive aphasia, others have proposed that phonemic rather than semantic paraphasias in naming, both in the fluent and the non-fluent subtype, should be used as a criterion to distinguish primary progressive aphasia from slowly progressive aphasia in other forms of degenerative brain disease. 1998-05-08 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Schwarz, R De Bleser, K Poeck, J Wei. A case of primary progressive aphasia. A 14-year follow-up study with neuropathological findings. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 121 ( Pt 1). 1998-05-08. PMID:9549492. the present case indicates that semantic dementia is not a reliable indicator of probable alzheimer's disease and supports the notion that there are different subtypes of primary progressive aphasia which cannot be defined by fluency or by the presence of phonemic paraphasia. 1998-05-08 2023-08-12 Not clear