All Relations between Stroke and left hemisphere

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Janina Wilmskoetter, Julius Fridriksson, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht, Brielle C Stark, John Delgaizo, Gregory Hickok, Kenneth I Vaden, Argye E Hillis, Chris Rorden, Leonardo Bonilh. Neuroanatomical structures supporting lexical diversity, sophistication, and phonological word features during discourse. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 24. 2020-09-21. PMID:31398554. we performed mri-based lesion symptom mapping in 58 individuals with a chronic left hemisphere stroke to assess how regional damage relates to spoken discourse-extracted measures of lexical diversity, lexical sophistication, and phonological word properties. 2020-09-21 2023-08-13 Not clear
Daniel Mirman, Amanda E Kraft, Denise Y Harvey, Adelyn R Brecher, Myrna F Schwart. Mapping articulatory and grammatical subcomponents of fluency deficits in post-stroke aphasia. Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience. vol 19. issue 5. 2020-09-14. PMID:31240565. articulatory deficits were measured by the proportion of phonetic errors (articulatory and prosodic) in a word repetition task in 115 participants with aphasia following left hemisphere stroke. 2020-09-14 2023-08-13 human
Tahel Naveh, Shahar Arz. The neuroanatomy of age perception. Behavioural brain research. vol 372. 2020-09-10. PMID:31229646. lesion analysis indicated main regions of overlap in the insula, as well as the rolandic operculum and the supramarginal gyrus, predominantly in the left hemisphere, as compared to stroke patients without age-disorientation. 2020-09-10 2023-08-13 Not clear
Cortney M Howard, Louisa L Smith, H Branch Coslett, Laurel J Buxbau. The role of conflict, feedback, and action comprehension in monitoring of action errors: Evidence for internal and external routes. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 115. 2020-09-02. PMID:30831536. the mechanisms and brain regions underlying error monitoring in complex action are poorly understood, yet errors and impaired error correction in these tasks are hallmarks of apraxia, a common disorder associated with left hemisphere stroke. 2020-09-02 2023-08-13 human
Cortney M Howard, Louisa L Smith, H Branch Coslett, Laurel J Buxbau. The role of conflict, feedback, and action comprehension in monitoring of action errors: Evidence for internal and external routes. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 115. 2020-09-02. PMID:30831536. action pantomime data from 67 participants with left hemisphere stroke were consistent with versions of internal route theories positing that competition signals monitoring requirements. 2020-09-02 2023-08-13 human
Elisabeth I S Achilles, Charlotta S Ballweg, Eva Niessen, Mona Kusch, Jana M Ant, Gereon R Fink, Peter H Weis. Neural correlates of differential finger gesture imitation deficits in left hemisphere stroke. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 23. 2020-08-06. PMID:31491825. neural correlates of differential finger gesture imitation deficits in left hemisphere stroke. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Elisabeth I S Achilles, Charlotta S Ballweg, Eva Niessen, Mona Kusch, Jana M Ant, Gereon R Fink, Peter H Weis. Neural correlates of differential finger gesture imitation deficits in left hemisphere stroke. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 23. 2020-08-06. PMID:31491825. to probe the hypotheses that regions of the dorso-dorsal stream are involved differentially in the imitation of ml gestures and that regions of the ventro-dorsal stream are involved differentially in the imitation of mf gestures, we analysed behavioural (imitation of mf and ml finger gestures) and lesion data of 293 patients with a left hemisphere (lh) stroke. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Erin L Meier, Jeffrey P Johnson, Yue Pan, Swathi Kira. A lesion and connectivity-based hierarchical model of chronic aphasia recovery dissociates patients and healthy controls. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 23. 2020-08-06. PMID:31491828. traditional models of left hemisphere stroke recovery propose that reactivation of remaining ipsilesional tissue is optimal for language processing whereas reliance on contralesional right hemisphere homologues is less beneficial or possibly maladaptive in the chronic recovery stage. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Hormos Salimi Dafsari, Anna Dovern, Gereon R Fink, Peter H Weis. Deficient body structural description contributes to apraxic end-position errors in imitation. Neuropsychologia. vol 133. 2020-07-29. PMID:31369744. apraxia is a common cognitive deficit after left hemisphere (lh) stroke. 2020-07-29 2023-08-13 human
Junhua Ding, Randi C Martin, A Cris Hamilton, Tatiana T Schnu. Dissociation between frontal and temporal-parietal contributions to connected speech in acute stroke. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 143. issue 3. 2020-07-06. PMID:32155246. here, we relate patterns of brain damage with deficits to the content and structure of spontaneous connected speech in 52 speakers during the acute stage of a left hemisphere stroke. 2020-07-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Michael Smith, Kevin T Cunningham, Katarina L Hale. Automating Error Frequency Analysis via the Phonemic Edit Distance Ratio. Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR. vol 62. issue 6. 2020-06-26. PMID:31170351. the purpose of this study was to validate an automated analysis based on a string metric-the unweighted levenshtein edit distance-to express phonemic error frequency after left hemisphere stroke. 2020-06-26 2023-08-13 Not clear
Zafer Keser, Rajani Sebastian, Khader M Hasan, Argye E Hilli. Right Hemispheric Homologous Language Pathways Negatively Predicts Poststroke Naming Recovery. Stroke. vol 51. issue 3. 2020-06-22. PMID:31884909. background and purpose- stroke is the leading cause of disability in united states, and aphasia is a common sequela after a left hemisphere stroke. 2020-06-22 2023-08-13 Not clear
J Vivian Dickens, Mackenzie E Fama, Andrew T DeMarco, Elizabeth H Lacey, Rhonda B Friedman, Peter E Turkeltau. Localization of Phonological and Semantic Contributions to Reading. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 39. issue 27. 2020-06-15. PMID:31061085. support vector regression lesion-symptom mapping (lsm) of 73 left hemisphere stroke survivors (male and female human subjects) not preselected for stereotyped dissociations revealed the differential contributions of specific cortical regions to reading pseudowords (ventral precentral gyrus), regular words (planum temporale, supramarginal gyrus, ventral precentral and postcentral gyrus, and insula), and concrete words (pars orbitalis and pars triangularis). 2020-06-15 2023-08-13 human
Bianca P Cunha, Sandra M S F Freitas, Georgia F O Gomes, Paulo B de Freita. Hand Grip and Load Force Coordination of the Ipsilesional Hand of Chronic Stroke Individuals. Journal of motor behavior. vol 51. issue 6. 2020-05-20. PMID:30600789. the findings indicate that stroke individuals preserve their ability to control and coordinate gf and lf when using their ipsilesional hand for object manipulation and the left hemisphere may play an essential role in the processing of somatosensory information needed for the gf control. 2020-05-20 2023-08-13 Not clear
Randi C Martin, Tatiana T Schnu. Independent contributions of semantic and phonological working memory to spontaneous speech in acute stroke. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 112. 2020-04-21. PMID:30577977. patients with left hemisphere stroke often have language deficits which impair their ability to produce phrases and sentences. 2020-04-21 2023-08-13 Not clear
Fréderique J Liégeois, Cristina Mei, Lauren Pigdon, Katherine J Lee, Belinda Stojanowski, Mark Mackay, Angela T Morga. Speech and Language Impairments After Childhood Arterial Ischemic Stroke: Does Hemisphere Matter? Pediatric neurology. vol 92. 2020-04-20. PMID:30594525. the association between left hemisphere stroke and acute speech and language impairment is well documented in adults. 2020-04-20 2023-08-13 Not clear
Charlotte S M Schmidt, Kai Nitschke, Tobias Bormann, Pia Römer, Dorothee Kümmerer, Markus Martin, Roza M Umarova, Rainer Leonhart, Karl Egger, Andrea Dressing, Mariachristina Musso, Klaus Willmes, Cornelius Weiller, Christoph P Kalle. Dissociating frontal and temporal correlates of phonological and semantic fluency in a large sample of left hemisphere stroke patients. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 23. 2020-03-20. PMID:31108458. dissociating frontal and temporal correlates of phonological and semantic fluency in a large sample of left hemisphere stroke patients. 2020-03-20 2023-08-13 Not clear
John W Scadding, J Allister Val. Winston Churchill: a left hemisphere stroke or possible focal seizure on 20 October 1956. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. vol 112. issue 5. 2020-01-21. PMID:30417728. winston churchill: a left hemisphere stroke or possible focal seizure on 20 october 1956. 2020-01-21 2023-08-13 Not clear
Christine E Watson, Stephen J Gotts, Alex Martin, Laurel J Buxbau. Bilateral functional connectivity at rest predicts apraxic symptoms after left hemisphere stroke. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 21. 2019-12-26. PMID:30612063. bilateral functional connectivity at rest predicts apraxic symptoms after left hemisphere stroke. 2019-12-26 2023-08-13 human
Christine E Watson, Stephen J Gotts, Alex Martin, Laurel J Buxbau. Bilateral functional connectivity at rest predicts apraxic symptoms after left hemisphere stroke. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 21. 2019-12-26. PMID:30612063. in the current study, we examine correlations between symptoms of apraxia-a disorder of skilled action that cannot be attributed to lower-level sensory or motor impairments-and spontaneous, resting brain activity in functional mri in chronic left hemisphere stroke patients and neurologically-intact control participants. 2019-12-26 2023-08-13 human