Journal article
Speech and oral motor profile after childhood hemispherectomy
F Liégeois, AT Morgan, LH Stewart, J Helen Cross, AP Vogel, F Vargha-Khadem
Brain and Language | Published : 2010
Abstract
Hemispherectomy (disconnection or removal of an entire cerebral hemisphere) is a rare surgical procedure used for the relief of drug-resistant epilepsy in children. After hemispherectomy, contralateral hemiplegia persists whereas gross expressive and receptive language functions can be remarkably spared. Motor speech deficits have rarely been examined systematically, thus limiting the accuracy of postoperative prognosis. We describe the speech profiles of hemispherectomized participants characterizing their intelligibility, articulation, phonological speech errors, dysarthric features, and execution and sequencing of orofacial speech and non-speech movements. Thirteen participants who had un..
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Awarded by MRC
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank all the participants and families who contributed to this research. This work was undertaken at GOSH/UCL Institute of Child Health which received part funding from the Department of Health's NIHR Biomedical Research Centres scheme.