Sandbox:nou
Dr Norina Usma
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Historical Perspective
Classification
Apraxia may be classified into different subtypes based on it's clinical features:
- Ideomotor apraxia: The most commonly known type of apraxia is Ideomotor apraxia, or decreased performance of skilled motor performances despite integral language, sensory and motor function[1]. Ideomotor apraxia is classically demonstrated when a patient questioned verbally to make a motion with a limb. Patients with Ideomotor apraxia display spatial and temporal errors, inconvenient timing, amplitude, sequencing, configuration, limb position in space[2]. It is an inability to carry out, learned motor acts, command, adequate motor, and sensory abilities. Ideomotor apraxia can be due to cerebral damage in numerous areas, including the left parietal lobe, the intrahemispheric association fibers, the dominant hemisphere motor association cortex, and the anterior corpus callosum. In the last two, ideomotor apraxia is usually restricted to the left arm. They often use their arm as an object relatively than indicating how to use the object . Patients are frequently able to achieve the same acts without struggle in their daily lives. This process has been called the "voluntary-automatic dissociation"[3][4].These patients have a deficiency in their skill to plan or ample motor actions that depend on semantic memory. They can describe how to achieve a response, but incapable to "imagine" or do the movement. Though the capability to perform an act inevitably when cued remains complete, this is recognized as automatic-voluntary dissociation[5].
- Constructional apraxia: It is a condition resulting from neurological damage, which is demonstrated by the inability to construct and copy to command two- and three-dimensional stimuli. Constructional apraxia has been a classic sign of a parietal lobe lesion, and as a valuable tool to escalate the spatial abilities functioned by this lobe. It has become gradually clear that Constructional Apraxia is a complex construct that can be observed with very different tasks that are only slightly interrelated, and hit various kinds of visuospatial, attentional, perceptual, planning, and motor mechanisms[6]. The patient with constructional apraxia is unable to construct, draw, or copy simple configurations; for example, intersecting shapes; they have trouble drawing basic shapes or copying a simple diagram[7].
- Buccofacial or orofacial apraxia: This is the most common type of apraxia; patients cannot convey facial movements on requests, such as voluntary movements of the tongue, cheeks, lips, pharynx, or larynx on command, for example, include licking lips, whistling, coughing, or winking)[6].
- Gait apraxia: Apraxia of gait is a rare locomotion syndrome categorized by the incapability of lifting the feet from the floor regardless of discontinuous stepping action. The accountable site of lesions is in the basal ganglia and frontal lobe[7].
- Limb-kinetic apraxia: It is the failure to make precise movements with an arm, finger, or leg. For example, a person may have trouble tying their shoes, waving hello, or typing on a computer[8].
Pathophysiology
Causes
Common causes of Apraxia may include:
- It could be due to a defect in the brain pathways that comprise memory of learned forms of movement. Any disease that is related to these areas can lead to apraxia, stroke, dementia are the leading causes, but there are many other causes as well.
- The lesion cause could be because of certain metabolic, neurological, or other disorders that influence the brain, predominantly the frontal lobe, inferior parietal lobule of the left hemisphere of the brain. In this area, complex, 3-dimensional depictions of formerly learned patterns and movements are stored[9].
- Patients with apraxia cannot regain these representations of stored, skilled actions.Therefore, patients with apraxia are unable to perform daily living activities well.
Differentiating Xyz from Other Diseases
Epidemiology and Demographics
Risk Factors
Screening
Natural History, Complications, and Prognosis
Over-all, patients with apraxia become to rely on others for their daily activities and need at least some notch of command; skilled nursing care may be obligatory. Patients with the tumor or degenerative diseases usually develop into amplified levels of dependence.
Patients with stroke may have a steady progression and may even recover somewhat. Persistence of apraxia of speech after 12 months is related to a larger volume of the left hemispheric stroke connecting Broca's area. Therefore prognosis of apraxia differs and depends partially on the original cause. Some people improve while others may display minimal improvement.
Diagnostic Study of Choice
- There is no single diagnostic study of choice for Apraxia's diagnosis, but Apraxia can be diagnosed based on neuroimaging and activity of daily living. When diagnosing Apraxia, specialists may look for the manifestation of other symptoms. For example, they may look for difficulties or weaknesses with verbal comprehension. Both of these are suggestive of other conditions, and their occurrence would support rule out Apraxia.
- For people with potential acquired Apraxia, they should go through neuroimaging—magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computed tomography (CT) scanning MRI which may be beneficial to determine the location and extent of any brain damage. It will also help evaluate possible atrophy expressive of a degenerative condition and exclude a mass lesion.
- Whitwell et al. in a study to determine the metabolic and neuroanatomical relate to aphasia and progressive Apraxia of speech (AOS), associations between the Token Test to assess Aphasia, Western Aphasia Battery and AOS rating scale (ASRS), 18-F fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) imaging and 3-Tesla MRI, were assessed. The only region that interconnected to ASRS was left-superior promotor volume[1].
- A broad assessment of Apraxia should consist of observation of daily routines, formal testing, self-report questionnaires, standardized measurements of ADLs, and targeted interviews with the patients and their relatives[2]. Apraxia should not be mixed up with aphasia (the inability to understand language); though, they often occur together.
- History and Symptoms
Physical Examination
Laboratory Findings
Electrocardiogram
X-ray
There are no x-ray findings associated with apraxia.
Echocardiography and Ultrasound
CT scan
MRI
Other Imaging Findings
Other Diagnostic Studies
Treatment
Medical Therapy
Interventions
Surgery
Primary Prevention
Secondary Prevention
References
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=MT_RCwAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PP1&ots=-nYhkcgHZg&sig=jXDl07y9RD1-YsTjtHVfn07hUZI#v=onepage&q&f=false. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11373145/. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9184099/
- ↑ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8292325/
- ↑ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8292325/
- ↑ https://www.malacards.org/card/apraxia?showAll=True
- ↑ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8174333/#:~:text=Apraxia%20of%20gait%20is%20a,and%2For%20the%20basal%20ganglia.
- ↑ https://rarediseases.org/rare-diseases/apraxia/#:~:text=Limb%2Dkinetic%20apraxia%20is%20the,done%20it%20in%20the%20past.
- ↑ https://rarediseases.org/rare-diseases/apraxia/#:~:text=Apraxia%20is%20caused%20by%20a,left%20hemisphere%20of%20the%20brain. Missing or empty
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