Paradoxical Facilitation: The Resolution Of Foreign Accent Syndrome After Cerebellar Stroke
Cohen, D. A., Kurowski, K., Steven, M. S., Blumstein, S. E., & Pascual-Leone, A. (2009). Paradoxical facilitation: the resolution of foreign accent syndrome after cerebellar stroke. Neurology, 73(7), 566–567. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181b2a4d8
View Original Source →Abstract
Foreign accent syndrome (FAS) is a rare speech disorder characterized by a change in prosody and other speech variables yielding altered phonetic characteristics that are perceived as a foreign accent. Lesions associated with FAS typically involve left frontoparietal regions. However, 2 reported left-hemispheric stroke patients presenting with FAS also had hypoperfusion of the right cerebellum on 99mTc ECD SPECT imaging, presumably from diaschisis. In both cases, there was a close parallel between the normalization of the cerebellar perfusion and resolution of the clinical syndrome up to 3 years later despite continued hypoperfusion of left hemispheric structures.1,2 The authors argued that the temporal association between the clinical improvement and the right cerebellar perfusion suggested a functional role of the cerebellum in this speech disorder. We describe a unique case that provides convergent evidence for a causative role of the cerebellum in FAS. ### Case report. A right-handed English-speaking woman was 58 years of age at the time of her left frontoparietal infarct (figure, A), presenting with right upper limb paresis and aphemia. Within hours, the patient’s paresis resolved to a slight hand ataxia and her speech sounded like English spoken with an unlearned accent. Workup suggested an embolic event, and she was discharged on warfarin. The foreign accent persisted for approximately 3 years until she had a right inferior cerebellar hemorrhage (figure, B–D) from accidental excessive anticoagulation. Following this second stroke, the patient and her family noted that the foreign accent was no longer perceptible in her speech. …
Case Details
Disease Location
Left frontoparietal region cerebellum (right)
Personal Characteristics
58 -year-old female english speaking right handed
Clinical Characteristics
Foreign accent syndrome (fas) at age 58 had a left frontoparietal infarct (cva1) with right upper limb paresis and aphemia paresis resolved to a slight hand ataxia and speech was affected fas persisted 3 years until a right inferior cerebellar hemorrhage (cva2) from too much anticoagulation
Remission Characteristics
After the second stroke (cva2) it is noted that her fas was no longer percepatientible cva2 paradoxically extinguished the fas
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Interhemisphereic competitive cerebellar control mechanisms lesions may result in a release from inhibition and activation of an alternative network
Clinical Treatment
Was originally prescribed warfarin after the first cva1 and thook that for 3 years until the cva2 occured
Non-Clinical Treatment
Stroke (neuromodulatory intervention)