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Effects of melodic intonation therapy in patients with chronic nonfluent aphasia

Sarah Marchina, Andrea Norton, Gottfried Schlaug

2022Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Patients with large left-hemisphere lesions and post-stroke aphasia often remain nonfluent. Melodic intonation therapy (MIT) may be an effective alternative to traditional speech therapy for facilitating recovery of fluency in those patients. In an open-label, proof-of-concept study, 14 subjects with nonfluent aphasia with large left-hemisphere lesions (171 ± 76 cc) underwent two speech/language assessments before, one at the midpoint, and two after the end of 75 sessions (1.5 h/session) of MIT. Functional MR imaging was done before and after therapy asking subjects to vocalize the same set of 10 bi-syllabic words. We found significant improvements in speech output after a period of intensive MIT (75 sessions for a total of 112.5 h) compared to two pre-therapy assessments. Therapy-induced gains were maintained 4 weeks post-treatment. Imaging changes were seen in a right-hemisphere network that included the posterior superior temporal and inferior frontal gyri, inferior pre- and postcentral gyri, pre-supplementary motor area, and supramarginal gyrus. Functional changes in the posterior right inferior frontal gyri significantly correlated with changes in a measure of fluency. Intense training of intonation-supported auditory-motor coupling and engaging feedforward/feedback control regions in the unaffected hemisphere improves speech-motor functions in subjects with nonfluent aphasia and large left-hemisphere lesions.

Topics & Concepts

AphasiaAudiologySupplementary motor areaPsychologyLateralization of brain functionFluencyInferior frontal gyrusMedicineCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceFunctional magnetic resonance imagingMathematics educationNeuroscience and Music PerceptionNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismHearing Loss and Rehabilitation