English and Italian speakers with
dementia-related language impairment experience distinct kinds of speech and
reading difficulties based on features of their native languages, according to
new research by scientists at the UC San Francisco Memory and
Aging Center and colleagues at the Neuroimaging Research Unit
and Neurology Unit at the San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Milan.
Neurologists had
long assumed that brain diseases that impact language abilities would manifest
in essentially the same way in patients around the world. But recent
discoveries have begun to question that assumption. For instance, Italian
speakers with dyslexia tend to have less severe reading impairment than English
or French speakers due to Italian’s simpler and more phonetic spelling.
“Clinical
criteria for diagnosing disorders that affect behavior and language are still
mainly based on studies of English speakers and Western cultures, which could
lead to misdiagnosis if people who speak different languages or come from
another cultural background express symptoms differently,” said study senior
author Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini, MD, PhD, a professor of neurology and
psychiatry and the Charles Schwab Distinguished Professor in Dyslexia and
Neurodevelopment at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center. “It is critical going
forward that studies take language and cultural differences into account when
studying brain disorders that affect higher cognitive functions — which we know
are greatly impacted by culture, environment, and experience.”
The new study, published January 10, 2020 in Neurology, the
medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, focused on patients with
primary progressive aphasia (PPA), a neurodegenerative disorder that affects
language areas in the brain, a condition often associated with Alzheimer’s
disease, frontotemporal lobar degeneration, and other dementia disorders.
The researchers
recruited 20 English-speaking PPA patients from the UCSF Memory and Aging
Center and 18 Italian-speaking PPA patients from San Raffaele Hospital, all of
whom shared a variant of PPA characterized by difficulty producing or
pronouncing words — so-called non-fluent PPA.
“We wanted to
study patients with PPA to understand whether people from different language
backgrounds actually experienced the disease differently, and what that might
mean for how we try to help patients remain resilient to the disease,” said
study lead author Elisa Canu, PhD, a neuropsychologist and researcher in the
San Raffaele Scientific Institute’s Neuroimaging Research Unit, which is led by
co-author Massimo Filippi, MD, full professor of neurology at the affiliated
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, and director of the neurology and
neurophysiology units at the San Raffaele Hospital.
Cognitive tests
and MRI brain scans revealed similar cognitive function and comparable levels
of brain degeneration in the two groups. But when the researchers compared
their performance on a battery of linguistic tests, they observed a key
difference.
English speakers
had more trouble pronouncing words — the traditional hallmark of nonfluent PPA
— and tended to speak less than usual. In contrast, Italian speakers with the
same disorder had fewer pronunciation difficulties but tended to produce much
shorter and grammatically simpler sentences. For example, when asked to
describe a drawing of a family at a lake house picnicking and flying a kite,
Italian speakers with non-fluent PPA might respond (in Italian): “The man and
the woman and the dog”; “Boat in the water”; “Family have picnic”; “There is a
kite”.
“We think this is specifically because the consonant clusters that are
so common in English pose a challenge for a degenerating speech-planning
system,” said Gorno-Tempini, who directs the language neurobiology laboratory
at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center, and is co-director of the UCSF Dyslexia Center and
the recently launched UCSF-UC
Berkeley Schwab Dyslexia and Cognitive Diversity Center. “In contrast, Italian
is easier to pronounce, but has much more complex grammar, and this is how
Italian speakers with PPA tend to run into trouble.”
The results are
important for efforts to ensure accurate diagnoses for patients with PPA across
different cultures: in the current study the Italian speakers do not match the
established diagnostic criteria for nonfluent PPA as closely as the English
speakers, since the criteria are based on studies of English-speaking patients.
“This means that
there are probably many people around the world — including non-native English
speakers in the U.S. — who are not getting the right diagnosis because their
symptoms don’t match what is described in clinical manuals based on studies of
native English speakers,” said Gorno-Tempini.
The researchers
acknowledge that this is a small study and cannot completely exclude the
possibility that differences in dementia severity, undetected anatomical
differences and differences in education level between Italian and English
participants could be confounding factors in the results.
Future studies in partnership with the Global Brain Health Institute (GBHI),
a joint effort of UCSF and Trinity College Dublin to reduce the impact of
dementia around the world, will attempt to replicate the findings in larger
groups of patients, and look for further differences between speakers of even
more diverse, non-Western languages, such as Chinese and Arabic.
“We hope that
such studies will advance our understanding of the brain science underlying
language and language disorders, raise awareness of health disparities in
dementia treatment, and ultimately improve care for all patients,”
Gorno-Tempini said.
Source: https://myfusimotors.com/2020/01/13/speech-disrupting-brain-disease-reflects-patients-native-tongue/
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