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Aphasia type and aging in Hindi-speaking stroke patients
Oleh:
Bhatnagar, Subhash C.
;
Jain, Satish K.
;
Bihari, Madhuri
;
Bansal, Naveen K.
;
Pauranik, Apoorva
;
Jain, Deep C.
;
Bhatnagar, Manav K.
;
Meheshwari, M.C.
;
Gupta, Meena
;
Padma, M.V.
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Brain and Language (Full Text) vol. 83 no. 2 (2002)
,
page 353-361.
Topik:
Aphasia type
;
Aging
;
Indian population
;
Stroke
;
Gender
;
Education
Fulltext:
83_02_Bhatnagar.pdf
(101.31KB)
Isi artikel
In this study, the clinical profile of Hindi-speaking stroke patients with aphasia from northern India has been investigated. We examined the interactional effect between age and gender with aphasia type in 97 Hindi-speaking right-handed individuals, the majority of them with a confirmed diagnosis of a cerebrovascular accident. The subjects included in the study ranged from 3 weeks to two years post-onset with a diagnosis of a common classical aphasia (Broca’s, Wernicke’s, anomic, global, conduction, and transcortical) types involving both males and females. Also examined was the interaction between literacy and aphasia type since the subjects had varied exposures to education (total illiteracy to professional/university education). While the data reported here about Hindi-speaking aphasics are relatively in agreement with the age-aphasia type patterns discussed in western countries, nonetheless some differences were also observed. The mean age of Indian patients with aphasia was significantly lower. Also, in addition to some gender and literacy related differences, an outstanding difference was that many clinical symptoms that are known to co-occur with aphasia were not readily reported by subjects with stroke.
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