Disease | dementia |
Phenotype | C0003537|aphasia |
Sentences | 5 |
PubMedID- 21882344 | As the disease progresses, afflicted individuals suffer a rapidly progressing dementia with apraxia, aphasia, and visual loss, leading to a vegetative state and death usually in the first decade from the onset of the initial symptoms. |
PubMedID- 23314975 | Using these principles, language symptoms of dementia with progressive non-fluent aphasia (pa), semantic dementia (sd), alzheimer's disease (ad), and vascular dementia (vad) can be understood. |
PubMedID- 23018361 | Of great interest is the hypothesis concerning progressive aphasia without generalized dementia, mentioned by henson [17], with specific reference to studies by mesulam [18], who described six patients suffering from slowly progressive aphasia, but without generalized dementia. |
PubMedID- 20534808 | As the disease proceeds, a rapidly progressive dementia with apraxia, aphasia and visual loss ensues, leading patients to a vegetative state and death, usually within the first decade from onset of the first symptoms (ganesh et al., 2006; delgado-escueta, 2007). |
PubMedID- 23577184 | For example, cbs patients may develop progressive speech and language disturbance that resembles the progressive non-fluent aphasia subtype of frontotemporal dementia, or behavioral disturbance – typically apathy rather than disinhibition – similar to patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia. |
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