Abstract

Diagnosis of primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is essentially based on the identification of progressive impairment of language abilities while other cognitive functions are preserved. The three variants of PPA are characterized by core and supportive clinical features related to the presence or absence of language impairment in different linguistic domains. In this article, we review the cognitive neuropsychological approach to the assessment of PPA and its contribution to the differential diagnosis of the three variants. The main advantage of this assessment approach is that it goes beyond the mere description and classification of clinical syndromes and identifies impaired and preserved cognitive and linguistic components and processes. The article is structured according to the main language domains: spoken production, language comprehension, and written language. Each section includes a brief description of the cognitive processes involved in the assessment tasks, followed by a discussion of typical characteristics for each PPA variant and common pitfalls in the interpretation of the results. In addition, the clinical benefit of the cognitive neuropsychological approach for the behavioral management of PPA is briefly sketched out in the conclusion.

Highlights

  • Dementia is a common condition that mainly occurs in older people

  • The assessment of repetition abilities plays an important role in progressive aphasia (PPA) differential diagnosis

  • As shown in this article, PPA is a heterogeneous syndrome in terms of its clinical manifestations

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia is a common condition that mainly occurs in older people. It is characterized by a decline in cognitive functioning that is severe enough to impact activities of daily living and social functioning [1]. Other types of dementia include vascular dementia, dementia in atypical parkinsonian syndromes, such as Lewy body dementia and corticobasal degeneration, and frontotemporal dementia [3] They are commonly associated with episodic memory impairment and usually characterized by language deficits that may affect word and sentence comprehension and production abilities [4]. According to clinical criteria established in 2011, following core features are essential to the diagnosis of lvPPA: (1) the presence of anomia in spontaneous speech and (2) confrontation naming and impaired repetition of sentences and phrases [6]. In sections addressing the main domains of language (i.e., spoken production, comprehension, written language), we briefly present the cognitive processes involved in the assessment tasks, the typical characteristics of each PPA variant, and common pitfalls in the interpretation of the results

The Cognitive Neuropsychological Approach to Language Assessment
The Assessment of Spoken Production
The Assessment of Word Production
The Assessment of Repetition Abilities
The Assessment of Comprehension
The Assessment of Word Comprehension and Object Knowledge
The Assessment of Sentence Comprehension
The Assessment of Written Language
The Assessment of Reading Abilities
The Assessment of Writing Abilities
Findings
Conclusions
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