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Does obstetric brachial plexus injury influence speech dominance?

✍ Scribed by Tibor Auer; Sandor Pinter; Norbert Kovacs; Zsuzsanna Kalmar; Ferenc Nagy; Reka A. Horvath; Balazs Koszo; Gyula Kotek; Gabor Perlaki; Maria Koves; Bernadette Kalman; Samuel Komoly; Attila Schwarcz; Friedrich G. Woermann; Jozsef Janszky


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
271 KB
Volume
65
Category
Article
ISSN
0364-5134

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

Right‐handedness and left‐sided language lateralization is an unresolved mystery with unknown cause/effect relations. Most studies suggest that the language lateralization is related to a fundamental brain asymmetry: right‐handedness may be secondary. We analyzed the possibility of an opposite cause/effect relation: whether asymmetric hand usage (as a cause) can influence language lateralization (as a consequence).

Methods

We determined language lateralization by functional magnetic resonance imaging in 15 subjects whose upper limb (UL) had been injured at birth because of unilateral damage of the brachial plexus. These subjects were able to use only one (the noninjured) UL perfectly.

Results

We found correlation between the severity of right‐sided UL injuries and hand usage dysfunction and the degree of left‐to‐right shift of language lateralization. There was, however, not a complete switch of language lateralization.

Interpretation

Right‐sided UL injury can induce a left‐to‐right shift in language lateralization, suggesting that hand usage can influence language lateralization. These findings may contradict the broadly accepted theory that right‐handedness is a secondary phenomenon caused by left‐sided hemispheric language lateralization. However, the cause/effect problem between asymmetric hand usage and language lateralization is not resolved in this study. Our findings may support the theory that gestures had a crucial role in human language evolution and is a part of the language system even today. Ann Neurol 2009;65:57–66


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