Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5041272 Brain and Language 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Right temporal lobe epilepsy patients showed frequent discourse deficits.•A lack of categorization and inhibition of data was found in discourse production.•Comprehension impairments were related with pragmatic and social inference.•Right anterior temporal areas contribute to build a contextually related meaning.•These areas would link semantic, world knowledge and social cognition processing.

ObjectiveDiscourse skills - in which the right hemisphere has an important role - enables verbal communication by selecting contextually relevant information and integrating it coherently to infer the correct meaning. However, language research in epilepsy has focused on single word analysis related mainly to left hemisphere processing. The purpose of this study was to investigate discourse abilities in patients with right lateralized medial temporal lobe epilepsy (RTLE) by comparing their performance to that of patients with left temporal lobe epilepsy (LTLE).Methods74 pharmacoresistant temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) patients were evaluated: 34 with RTLE and 40 with LTLE. Subjects underwent a battery of tests that measure comprehension and production of conversational and narrative discourse. Disease related variables and general neuropsychological data were evaluated.ResultsThe RTLE group presented deficits in interictal conversational and narrative discourse, with a disintegrated speech, lack of categorization and misinterpretation of social meaning. LTLE group, on the other hand, showed a tendency to lower performance in logical-temporal sequencing.SignificanceRTLE patients showed discourse deficits which have been described in right hemisphere damaged patients due to other etiologies. Medial and anterior temporal lobe structures appear to link semantic, world knowledge, and social cognition associated areas to construct a contextually related coherent meaning.

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