Intravenous Thrombolysis Improved Aphemia and Confirmed the Dominant Precentral Gyrus as the Responsible Lesion

Cureus. 2023 Oct 13;15(10):e46964. doi: 10.7759/cureus.46964. eCollection 2023 Oct.

Abstract

Aphemia is now considered an impairment of speech production. We present a case of an 89-year-old right-handed woman who received intravenous thrombolysis with a recombinant tissue plasminogen activator for the ischemic symptom "loss of speech" and recovered with an ischemic lesion of the left precentral gyrus. The patient had untreated atrial fibrillation. Neurological examination showed that her level of consciousness was alert, with normal comprehension and mild lower facial droop. Head computed tomography (CT) did not reveal a hemorrhagic lesion. To treat the acute ischemic stroke, she received a recombinant tissue plasminogen activator. Just after thrombolysis, she started to speak. Then, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an acute ischemic infarction in the dominant precentral gyrus. Follow-up MRI revealed the peripheral middle cerebral artery territory infarction in the left precentral gyrus, but she still could speak. The symptom of "loss of speech" was considered aphemia. By intravenous thrombolysis, impaired speech production in our patient was believed to be caused by an infarction in the dominant precentral gyrus. This case also demonstrated that the rare clinical symptom was due to an ischemic stroke in the territory of the distal middle cerebral artery. Clinicians who engage in stroke care need to know the rare symptoms of aphemia in the era when mechanical thrombectomy could be considered a promising treatment option for distal medium vessel occlusion.

Keywords: aphemia; dominant precentral gyrus; intravenous thrombolysis; ischemic stroke; lesion studies.

Publication types

  • Case Reports