Multimodal alexia: neuropsychological mechanisms and implications for treatment.

Esther S Kim, Steven Z Rapcsak, Sarah Andersen, P��lagie M Beeson
Author Information
  1. Esther S Kim: Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA. esther.kim@ualberta.ca

Abstract

Letter-by-letter (LBL) reading is the phenomenon whereby individuals with acquired alexia decode words by sequential identification of component letters. In cases where letter recognition or letter naming is impaired, however, a LBL reading approach is obviated, resulting in a nearly complete inability to read, or global alexia. In some such cases, a treatment strategy wherein letter tracing is used to provide tactile and/or kinesthetic input has resulted in improved letter identification. In this study, a kinesthetic treatment approach was implemented with an individual who presented with severe alexia in the context of relatively preserved recognition of orally spelled words, and mildly impaired oral/written spelling. Eight weeks of kinesthetic treatment resulted in improved letter identification accuracy and oral reading of trained words; however, the participant remained unable to successfully decode untrained words. Further testing revealed that, in addition to the visual-verbal disconnection that resulted in impaired word reading and letter naming, her limited ability to derive benefit from the kinesthetic strategy was attributable to a disconnection that prevented access to letter names from kinesthetic input. We propose that this kinesthetic-verbal disconnection resulted from damage to the left parietal lobe and underlying white matter, a neuroanatomical feature that is not typically observed in patients with global alexia or classic LBL reading. This unfortunate combination of visual-verbal and kinesthetic-verbal disconnections demonstrated in this individual resulted in a persistent multimodal alexia syndrome that was resistant to behavioral treatment. To our knowledge, this is the first case in which the nature of this form of multimodal alexia has been fully characterized, and our findings provide guidance regarding the requisite cognitive skills and lesion profiles that are likely to be associated with a positive response to tactile/kinesthetic treatment.

References

  1. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1961 Aug;24:275-80 [PMID: 13754209]
  2. Cereb Cortex. 2003 Dec;13(12):1313-33 [PMID: 14615297]
  3. Neuropsychologia. 2004;42(13):1768-80 [PMID: 15351626]
  4. Neurology. 2004 Jun 22;62(12):2221-9 [PMID: 15210886]
  5. Neuropsychologia. 2005;43(14):1983-9 [PMID: 15904939]
  6. J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 1998 Nov;4(6):636-47 [PMID: 10050368]
  7. Brain. 1989 Apr;112 ( Pt 2):327-59 [PMID: 2706436]
  8. Brain Lang. 1999 May;67(3):188-201 [PMID: 10210630]
  9. Q J Exp Psychol A. 1982 Aug;34(Pt 3):411-41 [PMID: 6890219]
  10. Hum Brain Mapp. 2002 Jan;15(1):39-53 [PMID: 11747099]
  11. Behav Neurol. 2000;12(4):191-200 [PMID: 11568431]
  12. Brain. 1992 Dec;115 ( Pt 6):1807-26 [PMID: 1486462]
  13. Brain. 2000 Feb;123 ( Pt 2):291-307 [PMID: 10648437]
  14. Brain Lang. 1995 Apr;49(1):77-103 [PMID: 7788347]
  15. Brain. 1998 May;121 ( Pt 5):843-50 [PMID: 9619188]
  16. Cogn Neuropsychol. 1998 Mar 1;15(1-2):141-165 [PMID: 28657519]
  17. Cortex. 2008 Sep;44(8):962-74 [PMID: 18586235]
  18. Neuropsychologia. 1993 May;31(5):435-58 [PMID: 8502378]
  19. Neuropsychol Rehabil. 2005 Dec;15(5):619-42 [PMID: 16381144]
  20. Eur Neurol. 2000;44(2):65-71 [PMID: 10965156]
  21. J Cogn Neurosci. 2011 May;23(5):1180-97 [PMID: 20433242]
  22. Aphasiology. 2010 Nov;24(11):1424-1442 [PMID: 21170161]
  23. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2003 Oct;46(5):1038-60 [PMID: 14575342]
  24. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2010 Apr;53(2):450-68 [PMID: 20360466]
  25. Neuropsychologia. 1992 Mar;30(3):237-56 [PMID: 1574160]
  26. Neurosci Lett. 1999 Jan 8;259(2):87-90 [PMID: 10025564]
  27. Neurology. 1983 Dec;33(12):1573-83 [PMID: 6685830]
  28. Brain Lang. 1976 Jan;3(1):135-43 [PMID: 1268693]
  29. Cogn Neuropsychol. 1998 Mar 1;15(1-2):7-51 [PMID: 28657524]
  30. Eur Neurol. 2002;48(2):87-96 [PMID: 12186998]
  31. Brain Res Cogn Brain Res. 2003 Jun;17(1):56-67 [PMID: 12763192]
  32. J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 1998 Nov;4(6):595-607 [PMID: 10050365]

Grants

  1. R01 DC008286/NIDCD NIH HHS
  2. R01 DC008286-02/NIDCD NIH HHS
  3. DC008286/NIDCD NIH HHS
  4. DC007647/NIDCD NIH HHS
  5. R01 DC007646-04/NIDCD NIH HHS
  6. R01 DC007646/NIDCD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Aged
Cerebral Cortex
Cognition Disorders
Dyslexia
Female
Humans
Kinesthesis
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Neuropsychological Tests
Photic Stimulation
Reading
Recognition, Psychology
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Vocabulary
Writing

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0letteralexiatreatmentreadingkinestheticresultedwordsLBLidentificationimpaireddisconnectiondecodecasesrecognitionnaminghoweverapproachglobalstrategyprovideinputimprovedindividualvisual-verbalkinesthetic-verbalmultimodalLetter-by-letterphenomenonwherebyindividualsacquiredsequentialcomponentlettersobviatedresultingnearlycompleteinabilityreadwhereintracingusedtactileand/orstudyimplementedpresentedseverecontextrelativelypreservedorallyspelledmildlyoral/writtenspellingEightweeksaccuracyoraltrainedparticipantremainedunablesuccessfullyuntrainedtestingrevealedadditionwordlimitedabilityderivebenefitattributablepreventedaccessnamesproposedamageleftparietallobeunderlyingwhitematterneuroanatomicalfeaturetypicallyobservedpatientsclassicunfortunatecombinationdisconnectionsdemonstratedpersistentsyndromeresistantbehavioralknowledgefirstcasenatureformfullycharacterizedfindingsguidanceregardingrequisitecognitiveskillslesionprofileslikelyassociatedpositiveresponsetactile/kinestheticMultimodalalexia:neuropsychologicalmechanismsimplications

Similar Articles

Cited By