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Aphasia in border‐zone infarcts has a specific initial pattern and good long‐term prognosis
Authors:C Flamand‐Roze  C Cauquil‐Michon  E Roze  R Souillard‐Scemama  L Maintigneux  D Ducreux  D Adams  C Denier
Abstract:Background: While border‐zone infarcts (BZI) account for about 10% of strokes, studies on related aphasia are infrequent. The aim of this work was to redefine specifically their early clinical pattern and evolution. Methods: We prospectively studied consecutive patients referred to our stroke unit within a 2‐year period. Cases of aphasia in right‐handed patients associated with a MRI confirmed left‐sided hemispheric BZI were included. These patients had a standardized language examination in the first 48 h, at discharge from stroke unit and between 6 and 18 months later. Results: Eight patients were included. Three had anterior (MCA/ACA), two posterior (MCA/PCA), two both anterior and posterior, and one bilateral BZI. All our patients initially presented transcortical mixed aphasia, characterized by comprehension and naming difficulties associated with preserved repetition. In all patients, aphasia rapidly improved. It fully recovered within a few days in three patients. Initial improvement was marked, although incomplete in the five remaining patients: their aphasias specifically evolved according to the stroke location toward transcortical motor aphasia for the three patients with anterior BZI and transcortical sensory aphasia for the two patients with posterior BZI. All patients made a full language recovery within 18 months after stroke. Conclusions: We report a specific aphasic pattern associated with hemispheric BZI, including an excellent long‐term outcome. These findings appear relevant to (i) clinically suspect BZI and (ii) plan rehabilitation and inform the patient and his family of likelihood of full language recovery.
Keywords:aphasia  border‐zone  prognosis  stroke  watershed infarct
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