Semantic variant primary progressive aphasia
Diagnosis (Gorno-Tempini 2011)
1) Must have both:
- a. Impaired confrontation naming
- b. Impaired single-word comprehension
2) And must have at least three of the following:
- a. Impaired object knowledge, particularly for low-frequency or low-familiarity items (i.e. “What is
a screwdriver?”)
- b. Surface dyslexia or dysgraphia
- c. Spared repetition
- d. Spared speech production (grammar and motor speech – though may use increasing number of filler words)
3) Imaging-supported semantic variant diagnosis requires clinical diagnosis above plus imaging with at least one of:
- a. Predominant anterior temporal lobe atrophy
- b. Predominant anterior temporal hypoperfusion or hypometabolism on SPECT or PET
4) Semantic variant PPA with definite pathology diagnosis requires clinical diagnosis above plus either of the following:
- a. Histopathologic evidence of a specific neurodegenerative pathology (e.g., FTLD-tau, FTLD-TDP, AD, other)
- b. Presence of a known pathogenic mutation
- patients with svPPA frequently have behavioral symptoms that overlap with bvFTD (Finger 2016)
- as the disease progresses to involve more posterior brain regions (posterior temporal regions, visual temporal association areas), patients may develop prosopagnosia and visual agnosia (Finger 2016)
- elemental neurological examination is generally normal, including frontal release signs (Finger 2016)
- neuropsychological testing: predominant semantic language deficits (tests may include semantically categorized word generation or pyramid and palm tree test); episodic memory may better preservation of recent events than remote memories (opposite pattern to AD) (Finger 2016)
Imaging
- MRI axial view shows asymmetric L>R anterior temporal lobe atrophy (Ljubenkov and Miller 2016)
Pathology
- pathology is typically TDP-43 type C > 3R tau (Ljubenkov and Miller 2016)
References
Finger, E. C. Frontotemporal Dementias. Contin. Minneap. Minn 22, 464–489 (2016). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27042904/
Gorno-Tempini, M. L. et al. Classification of primary progressive aphasia and its variants. Neurology 76, 1006–1014 (2011). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21325651/
Ljubenkov, P. A. & Miller, B. L. A Clinical Guide to Frontotemporal Dementias. FOCUS 14, 448–464 (2016). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31975825/