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Aphasia in General Paralysis and the Conditions associated with it

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Edward Mapother*
Affiliation:
Long Grove Asylum

Extract

Certain features of the speech defects commonly seen in general paralysis bear a resemblance to aphasia, e.g., inability to find required words, and the tendency to omit syllables or words without noticing it, or to transpose syllables or the vowels of successive words. More definite aphasia, however, may occur in general paralysis either as a transitory or lasting symptom. Though it may arise under a variety of conditions it is distinctly uncommon.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1912 

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References

(1) Campbell, MacFie.—American Journal of Insanity, Vol. lxviii, p. 491 (January, 1912).Google Scholar
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(3) Vigoroux, . —Bull. et Mem. Soc. Anat. de Paris, 1904, lxxix, p. 460.Google Scholar
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(7) Lusk, .—Annals of Surgery, Vol. liv, p. 449 (October, 1911).Google Scholar
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