International Journal of Clinical Medicine

Volume 7, Issue 1 (January 2016)

ISSN Print: 2158-284X   ISSN Online: 2158-2882

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.52  Citations  h5-index & Ranking

Association between Aphasia and Acalculia: Analytical Cross-Sectional Study

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 252KB)  PP. 1-9  
DOI: 10.4236/ijcm.2016.71001    5,203 Downloads   6,609 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Acalculia in aphasic patients should be better investigated in order to understand if it is a simple comorbid or if it is influenced by language disorders. This study aimed to compare the performance on EC301 battery calculation tasks between aphasic and normal subjects and sought to verify a possible association between number processing and calculation skills and linguistic changes in aphasic patients, in order to investigate if language disorders interfere with number processing and calculation. Analytical cross-sectional study with a control group, performed of the Department of Speech and Hearing Disorders of a public university, conducted in the city of São Paulo, Brazil. First, to analyze the specific difficulties encountered in numerical processing and calculation tasks among the aphasic group, aphasic and healthy adult’s performance in specific calculation tasks were compared. The calculation tasks, which had been badly performed by aphasic patients, were selected. Aphasic patients were also submitted to the language tasks from Montreal-Toulouse Protocol: oral and written comprehension, repetition, reading aloud, naming and dictation. We observed that aphasic individuals showed changes in numerical processing and calculation tasks that were not observed in the healthy population. The most important finding of this study was that aphasic individuals showed changes in numerical processing and calculation that were positively associated to their linguistic performance. The strong associations between battery EC301 and linguistic tasks suggest that language disorders interfere with number processing and calculation.

Share and Cite:

De Luccia, G. and Zazo Ortiz, K. (2016) Association between Aphasia and Acalculia: Analytical Cross-Sectional Study. International Journal of Clinical Medicine, 7, 1-9. doi: 10.4236/ijcm.2016.71001.

Cited by

[1] Aphasia and Math: deficits with basic number comprehension and in numerical activities of daily living
2021
[2] Effects of language stimulation on cognition of institutionalized aged people: a preliminary case series study
2021
[3] Numerical activities of daily living: a short version
2021
[4] A Bayesian optimization approach for rapidly mapping residual network function in stroke
Brain, 2021
[5] Fine motor control in using pen for writing and copying: in the impaired and healthy brain
2020
[6] Cortical collateralization induced by language and arithmetic in non-right-handers
2020
[7] Acalculia in Aphasia
2020
[8] A Bayesian optimisation approach for rapidly mapping residual network function in stroke
2020
[9] Ecological assessment of numerical skills in adults with left stroke
2020
[10] Autistic Spectrum Disorder in Producing Words of Indonesia's Adult Patient
2020
[11] Assessment of the types of acalculia and dyscalculia in aphasic persons
2019
[12] Delineating the cognitive-neural substrates of writing: a large scale behavioral and voxel based morphometry study
2019
[13] Treatment of diabetes, education on the complications from the disease and importance of the hygiene-dythetic regime
… Journal, Scientific Papers, 2018
[14] On linguistic properties of verbal number systems: A cross-linguistic study of number transcoding errors observed in a Basque–French bilingual patient with aphasia
Lingua, 2017
[15] Vol. 15 nº 1-Jan/Feb/Mar de 2021
RDB da Cunha, TF Pacheco

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.