Pure word deafness due to left hemisphere damage |
Author(s):
, , , ,Journal/Book: Cortex. 1992; 28: 295-303.
Abstract: We report the case of a 55 year-old right-handed man who presented with a long lasting pure word deafness following left thalamic bleeding. There was no sign of aphasia. The auditory deficit was specific for language, while recognition of music and environmental sounds was normal. CT, MRI and PET examinations showed that the lesion was anatomically and functionally confined to the left cerebral hemisphere, mainly the white matter of the temporal and parietal lobes. Wernicke's area was largely preserved. It is proposed that pure word deafness was consequent to the isolation of Wernicke's area from incoming auditory information due to the interruption both of the association fibers from the right auditory area traveling across the corpus callosum and of the left auditory radiations.
Keyword(s): Brain Injuries pathology; Brain Injuries radionuclide imaging; Cerebral Hemorrhage complications; Cerebral Hemorrhage etiology; Deafness pathology; Deafness radionuclide imaging; Hearing Tests; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Middle Age; Speech Perception physiology; Thalamus pathology; Tomography, Emission Computed; Tomography, X Ray Computed Brain Injuries complications; Deafness etiology Case Report; Human; Male
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