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Alexia due to ischemic stroke of the visual word form area
Authors:Peter E. Turkeltaub  Ethan M. Goldberg  Whitney A. Postman-Caucheteux  Merisa Palovcak  Colin Quinn  Charles Cantor
Affiliation:1. Department of Neurology, Georgetown University, 4000 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC 20057, USA;2. Department of Neurology, The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 3W Gates Building, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA;3. Division of Neurology, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Colket Translational Research Building, 10th Floor, 3501 Civic Center Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA;4. Speech-Language-Hearing Science Program, LaSalle University, 1900 West Olney Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19141, USA
Abstract:
The visual word form area (VWFA) is a region in the posterior left occipitotemporal cortex adjacent to the fusiform gyrus hypothesized to mediate word recognition. Evidence supporting the role of this area in reading comes from neuroimaging studies of normal subjects, case-controlled lesion studies, and studies of patients with surgical resection of the VWFA for tumors or epilepsy. Based on these prior reports, a small discrete lesion to the VWFA would be expected to cause alexia in a literate person without prior brain process, but such a case has not previously been reported to our knowledge. Here, we report the case of a previously-healthy 63-year-old man with the acute onset of alexia without other significant impairments. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain revealed a small ischemic stroke localized to the inferior left occipitotemporal cortex, corresponding to the approximate location of the putative VWFA. Characteristic of pure alexia, testing in the weeks following the stroke revealed a letter-by-letter reading strategy and a word length effect on single word reading. Formal visual field testing was normal. There was no color anomia, or object or face recognition deficits, although a mild agraphia may have been present. This case of acute-onset alexia in a previously normal individual due to a small stroke restricted to the VWFA and sparing occipital cortex and white matter pathways supports the conclusion that the VWFA is crucial for reading.
Keywords:Alexia  Pure alexia  Alexia without agraphia  Visual word form area  Agraphia  Dyslexia  Dysgraphia  Reading
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