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      Pediatric traumatic brain injury: Language outcomes and their relationship to the arcuate fasciculus

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          Abstract

          Highlights

          • Diffusion weighted MRI can assist in the prognosis of neuropsychological deficits.

          • We explored white matter changes and language outcome in people with brain injury.

          • Sentence generation impairments were found in dysarthric participants.

          • Impairments were linked to reduced corpus callosum and left arcuate fasciculus size.

          • This dual blow seriously reduces the potential for language reorganisation.

          Abstract

          Pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) may result in long-lasting language impairments alongside dysarthria, a motor-speech disorder. Whether this co-morbidity is due to the functional links between speech and language networks, or to widespread damage affecting both motor and language tracts, remains unknown.

          Here we investigated language function and diffusion metrics (using diffusion-weighted tractography) within the arcuate fasciculus, the uncinate fasciculus, and the corpus callosum in 32 young people after TBI (approximately half with dysarthria) and age-matched healthy controls ( n = 17). Only participants with dysarthria showed impairments in language, affecting sentence formulation and semantic association. In the whole TBI group, sentence formulation was best predicted by combined corpus callosum and left arcuate volumes, suggesting this “dual blow” seriously reduces the potential for functional reorganisation. Word comprehension was predicted by fractional anisotropy in the right arcuate. The co-morbidity between dysarthria and language deficits therefore seems to be the consequence of multiple tract damage.

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          MRtrix: Diffusion tractography in crossing fiber regions

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            Perisylvian language networks of the human brain.

            Early anatomically based models of language consisted of an arcuate tract connecting Broca's speech and Wernicke's comprehension centers; a lesion of the tract resulted in conduction aphasia. However, the heterogeneous clinical presentations of conduction aphasia suggest a greater complexity of perisylvian anatomical connections than allowed for in the classical anatomical model. This article re-explores perisylvian language connectivity using in vivo diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging tractography. Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging data from 11 right-handed healthy male subjects were averaged, and the arcuate fasciculus of the left hemisphere reconstructed from this data using an interactive dissection technique. Beyond the classical arcuate pathway connecting Broca's and Wernicke's areas directly, we show a previously undescribed, indirect pathway passing through inferior parietal cortex. The indirect pathway runs parallel and lateral to the classical arcuate fasciculus and is composed of an anterior segment connecting Broca's territory with the inferior parietal lobe and a posterior segment connecting the inferior parietal lobe to Wernicke's territory. This model of two parallel pathways helps explain the diverse clinical presentations of conduction aphasia. The anatomical findings are also relevant to the evolution of language, provide a framework for Lichtheim's symptom-based neurological model of aphasia, and constrain, anatomically, contemporary connectionist accounts of language.
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              Ventral and dorsal pathways for language.

              Built on an analogy between the visual and auditory systems, the following dual stream model for language processing was suggested recently: a dorsal stream is involved in mapping sound to articulation, and a ventral stream in mapping sound to meaning. The goal of the study presented here was to test the neuroanatomical basis of this model. Combining functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with a novel diffusion tensor imaging (DTI)-based tractography method we were able to identify the most probable anatomical pathways connecting brain regions activated during two prototypical language tasks. Sublexical repetition of speech is subserved by a dorsal pathway, connecting the superior temporal lobe and premotor cortices in the frontal lobe via the arcuate and superior longitudinal fascicle. In contrast, higher-level language comprehension is mediated by a ventral pathway connecting the middle temporal lobe and the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex via the extreme capsule. Thus, according to our findings, the function of the dorsal route, traditionally considered to be the major language pathway, is mainly restricted to sensory-motor mapping of sound to articulation, whereas linguistic processing of sound to meaning requires temporofrontal interaction transmitted via the ventral route.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Brain Lang
                Brain Lang
                Brain and Language
                Academic Press
                0093-934X
                1090-2155
                1 December 2013
                December 2013
                : 127
                : 3
                : 388-398
                Affiliations
                [a ]Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Unit, University College London, Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom
                [b ]Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London, United Kingdom
                [c ]Brain Research Institute, Florey Neuroscience Institutes, Melbourne, Australia
                [d ]Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia
                [e ]Department of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne, Australia
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. Address: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Unit, University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH, United Kingdom. Fax: +44 20 7905 2616. f.liegeois@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
                Article
                S0093-934X(13)00101-6
                10.1016/j.bandl.2013.05.003
                3988975
                23756046
                e9184d8d-0ba7-4847-9794-104da81207a4
                © 2013 Elsevier Inc.

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

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                Article

                Neurosciences
                pediatric brain injury,expressive language,dysarthria,tractography,arcuate fasciculus.

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