High-level language difficulties in Parkinson's disease

Twenty-six subjects with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and normal cognitive status (as measured by the Mini-Mental State Examination) were examined with a battery of tests selected to reveal subtle and/or high-level language impairments. The test battery included 'repetition of long sentences', 'recreating sentences', 'making inferences', 'comprehension of logico-grammatical sentences', 'comprehension of ambiguous sentences' and 'comprehension of metaphors', 'word definitions', 'word fluency', 'naming', 'sentence analysis' and 'morphological completion'. Comparisons were made between the PD subjects and 26 control subjects matched for age, gender and level of education. Significant differences in performance between the PD subjects and the control subjects were found in the ability to make inferences and to analyse sentences (state the correct number of words in a read sentence). An additional four subjects with different degrees of cognitive dysfunction were also investigated and were found to have particular problems in making inferences, recreating sentences and comprehending metaphors and ambiguities. The results suggest that processing implied information might be a specific problem in this group and that the task of making inferences could be a particularly sensitive test of high-level language dysfunction.

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