Bilateral language: is the left hemisphere still dominant?

Abstract:

:A 13-year-old left-handed boy with a left fronto-parietal vascular malformation evidenced bilateral symmetrical language representation at intracarotid amytal testing. Surgical resection of the parietal motor and frontal premotor area (sparing classical perisylvian language regions) for seizure control resulted in an acute aphasia. Language deficits were still apparent 3 months and to a lesser degree 1 year after surgery. This suggests that when language is bilateral and symmetrical, the left hemisphere may still be dominant or both hemispheres may be necessary to sustain full language competence. Explanations for atypical language localization within the left hemisphere are also discussed.

journal_name

Brain Lang

journal_title

Brain and language

authors

Nass R,Myerson R

doi

10.1016/0093-934x(85)90089-6

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

1985-07-01 00:00:00

pages

342-56

issue

2

eissn

0093-934X

issn

1090-2155

pii

0093-934X(85)90089-6

journal_volume

25

pub_type

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