A Metabolic Imaging Study of Lexical and Phonological Naming Errors in Alzheimer Disease

Am J Alzheimers Dis Other Demen. 2020 Jan-Dec:35:1533317520922390. doi: 10.1177/1533317520922390.

Abstract

Patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) produce a variety of errors on confrontation naming that indicate multiple loci of impairment along the naming process in this disease. We correlated brain hypometabolism, measured with 18fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography, with semantic and formal errors, as well as nonwords deriving from phonological errors produced in a picture-naming test by 63 patients with AD. Findings suggest that neurodegeneration leads to: (1) phonemic errors, by interfering with phonological short-term memory, or with control over retrieval of phonological or prearticulatory representations, within the left supramarginal gyrus; (2) semantic errors, by disrupting general semantic or visual-semantic representations at the level of the left posterior middle and inferior occipitotemporal cortex, respectively; (3) formal errors, by damaging the lexical-phonological output interface in the left mid-anterior segment of middle and superior temporal gyri. This topography of semantic-lexical-phonological steps of naming is in substantial agreement with dual-stream neurocognitive models of word generation.

Keywords: Alzheimer disease; FDG-PET; formal errors; hypometabolism; lexicon; naming impairment; phonemic errors; phonological short-term memory; phonology; semantic errors.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Alzheimer Disease / diagnostic imaging
  • Alzheimer Disease / metabolism*
  • Alzheimer Disease / psychology*
  • Brain / diagnostic imaging*
  • Brain / metabolism*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Semantics*