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Does a lesion in Broca's area cause apraxia?
Author(s) -
Tsuruya Natsuko,
Kobayakawa Mutsutaka,
Futamura Akinori,
Sugimoto Azusa,
Kawamura Mitsuru
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
neurology and clinical neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.125
0ISSN - 2049-4173
DOI - 10.1002/ncn3.10
Subject(s) - apraxia , gesture , aphasia , broca's area , cognitive psychology , medicine , comprehension , psychology , audiology , neuroscience , linguistics , philosophy
Background and Aim Broca's area, which comprises the inferior frontal gyrus and its surrounding regions, is associated with language function. Recent functional imaging studies showed that it is also related to processing goal‐directed actions.This study aimed to determine the types of action disorders that occur after damage to Broca's area. Methods Here, we report four patients with left inferior frontal lesions that included Broca's area. The patients did not exhibit severe language comprehension impairment or paralysis that affected the apraxia testing. The patients were asked to perform intransitive gestures in response to verbal commands, imitate intransitive gestures, perform transitive gestures in response to verbal commands, perform transitive gestures in response to visual objects, imitate transitive gestures, and use tools. Results All patients exhibited impaired gestures in response to verbal commands, while the performances regarding imitation and actual tool use were better. An error pattern analysis showed that the patients predominantly made spatial action errors. This pattern corresponds to the classical definitions of ideomotor apraxia. Conclusion These results indicate that Broca's area mediates action production and that a lesion in this area can cause ideomotor apraxia. Although we should be cautious about the influence of aphasia, we believe that the comprehension deficit observed in our patients cannot account for their apraxic syndromes. Because the deficit was seen mainly for verbal commands, damage in Broca's area may have disrupted the association between verbal and action domains.