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Neurocase
Behavior, Cognition and Neuroscience
Volume 11, 2005 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Relative preservation of ‘animate’ knowledge in an atypical presentation of herpes simplex virus encephalitis

, &
Pages 157-166 | Received 20 Feb 2004, Accepted 15 Jan 2005, Published online: 16 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

A comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tests designed to assess primary cognitive functions, including language and semantic memory, was given to MG, a patient with confirmed herpes simplex virus encephalitis. MG’s initial jargon aphasia resolved over time to leave her with a mild phonological impairment. She had a very mild amnesia that was worse for verbal material and a category-specific impairment of semantic memory. This latter impairment resulted in a significant anomia that was worse for manmade/artefact items than for animate kinds. Her naming difficulties were associated with a mild impairment in comprehension that was not specific to category or feature type. MRI revealed a strongly asymmetric and atypical distribution of pathology in MG with the disease affecting the left medial temporal lobe, temporal pole, left frontotemporal and temporoparietal regions.

Acknowledgments

The first author is supported by a Fellowship awarded by Research into Ageing and funded by the Dunhill Medical Trust.

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