Anterior temporal lobe, word comprehension, and physiology of atrophy in semantic primary progressive aphasia
Jordan Q. Behn, Elena Barbieri, M. Marsel Mesulam, Borna Bonakdarpour

TL;DR
This study shows that damage to the anterior temporal lobe is strongly linked to word comprehension loss in a type of progressive brain disorder.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that ATL degeneration, not traditional Wernicke’s area, is the key predictor of comprehension impairment in svPPA.
Findings
Bilateral anterior temporal lobe atrophy and hypometabolism were significantly observed in svPPA patients.
Structural and metabolic measures independently correlated with impaired word comprehension.
Dysfunction extended beyond the ATL into posterior temporal regions, but not into Wernicke’s area.
Abstract
Peak focal atrophy in the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) highlights the critical role of this area for word comprehension in semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA). However, the assumption that peak atrophy sites are specific markers of dysfunctional brain sites, and therefore reliable variables for clinicopathologic correlations, has not been rigorously tested. Using structural MRI and FDG-PET, we assessed atrophy and hypometabolism in 32 individuals with PPA (11 svPPA) and 10 healthy controls. Word comprehension was measured using the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test. Voxel-based morphometry and standardized uptake value ratios were used to generate atrophy and hypometabolism maps. Two-sample t-tests compared svPPA and controls, and regression analyses evaluated the relationship between imaging metrics and word comprehension. Findings revealed significant bilateral ATL…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurobiology of Language and Bilingualism · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Parkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments
