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Learning disabilities associated with
language problems later in life
Individuals with a neurodegenerative
condition affecting language appear more
likely to have had a history of learning
disabilities than those with other types of
dementia or with no cognitive problems,
according to a report in the February issue
of Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
The condition known as primary progressive
aphasia causes individuals to lose language
abilities as they age, even though their
other brain functions appear unaffected for
at least the first two years, according to
background information in the article.
“Although risk factors for Alzheimer’s
disease have been well studied, much less is
known about risk factors for primary
progressive aphasia,” the authors write.
Emily Rogalski, Ph.D., then at Northwestern
University and now at Rush University
Medical Center, Chicago, and colleagues
studied a group of 699 individuals—108 with
primary progressive aphasia, 154 with
Alzheimer’s disease, 84 with a related
disorder known as frontotemporal dementia
and 353 controls without dementia.
When enrolling in the study, participants
completed a detailed demographic and medical
history interview that included two
questions about whether they or immediate
family members had a history of learning
disabilities.
A medical record review was conducted for
the 23 individuals with primary progressive
aphasia who reported either a personal or
family history of learning disability.
Patients with primary progressive aphasia
were more likely to have had learning
disabilities or a close family member with
learning disabilities than were those with
other forms of dementia or without dementia.
The review of patients with both aphasia and
learning disabilities showed families with
unusually high rates of learning problems,
especially dyslexia.
“For example, in three cases, nine of the 10
children of the probands [participants] were
reported to have a history of specific
learning disability in the area of
language,” the authors write.
“In our clinical practice, we encounter many
patients with primary progressive aphasia
who report that spelling was never their
‘strong suit’ or that they could not learn
new languages, but who would not have
identified themselves as having a learning
disability,” they continue.
The findings may, therefore, underestimate
the frequency of learning disabilities in
patients and their families.
The association suggests that some
individuals or families may have an
underlying susceptibility to difficulties
with the language network.
“This relationship may exist in only a small
subgroup of persons with dyslexia without
necessarily implying that the entire
population with dyslexia or their family
members are at higher risk of primary
progressive aphasia,” the authors conclude.
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