A 51-year-old, right-handed male injured his head when drunk. After an initial mute state lasting for several hours, he exhibited fluent aphasia, impaired word finding, some verbal paraphasia and impaired verbal comprehension. A CT scan revealed a contusion in the left anterior temporal lobe. He was treated conservatively, and at the follow-up 6 months later, his sensory aphasia had recovered well. The relationship between closed head trauma and aphasia is reviewed with special attention to its nature and clinical course.
Sensory aphasia after closed head injury. Publishing Authors By Initials