# Category-Specific Semantic Impairment After Left Anterior Thalamic Infarction: A Case Report

**Authors:** Nobuhiro Takahashi, Mimpei Kawamura, Hiroki Tomita, Mamiko Sato, Yasutaka Kobayashi

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.102437 · Cureus · 2026-01-27

## TL;DR

A man with a brain injury in the thalamus showed specific trouble understanding and naming certain types of words, especially unfamiliar ones.

## Contribution

This case is the first to link left anterior thalamic infarction with category-specific semantic impairment involving semantic control mechanisms.

## Key findings

- The patient showed asymmetric performance declines across semantic categories in noun comprehension and naming.
- Semantic impairment was more pronounced under low-familiarity conditions and in resolving semantic competition.
- The findings suggest dysfunction in semantic control mechanisms, not just lexical retrieval.

## Abstract

Thalamic lesions can result in a wide range of higher-order cognitive deficits; however, their association with category-specific semantic impairment has not been sufficiently examined. We report a 41-year-old man with a left anterior thalamic infarction who exhibited fluent speech with preserved repetition but showed asymmetric performance declines across semantic categories in both noun comprehension and naming, particularly under low-familiarity conditions. Detailed assessment revealed category-specific semantic impairment characterized by an interaction between semantic category and item familiarity, rather than a uniform semantic deficit. In addition, the patient demonstrated difficulty in a non-verbal semantic judgment task (Semantic Odd-One-Out Task), particularly when selecting among semantically close items, indicating impaired resolution of semantic competition. These findings suggest that the impairment was not limited to lexical retrieval processes but may extend to dysfunction in the regulatory (semantic control) mechanisms of the broader semantic processing network. This case provides clinically valuable evidence supporting the role of the thalamus as a key node in the control and integration of distributed semantic networks.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Aphasia (MESH:D001037), atrioventricular block (MESH:D054537), transcortical sensory aphasia (MESH:D001041), Semantic Impairment (MESH:D008569), cognitive deficits (MESH:D003072), semantic (MESH:D057180), cortical damage (MESH:D054220), Left Anterior Thalamic Infarction (MESH:D056988), ischemic anterior thalamic infarction (MESH:D007238), temporal lobe damage (MESH:D004833), impaired (MESH:D060825), word comprehension deficits (MESH:D001308), hematoma (MESH:D006406), Thalamic aphasia (MESH:D013786), SLTA (MESH:D013736), hemorrhagic lesions (MESH:D006470), language deficits (MESH:D007806)
- **Chemicals:** TLPA (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

18 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12947597/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12947597