- Liu, Jessie;
- Harper, Sarah;
- Zhao, Lingyun;
- Hullett, Patrick;
- Kurteff, Garret;
- Wilson, Stephen;
- Leonard, Matthew;
- Silva, Alexander;
- Chang, Edward;
- Scott, Terri;
- Pedisich, Deborah
BACKGROUND: Apraxia of speech is a disorder of speech-motor planning in which articulation is effortful and error-prone despite normal strength of the articulators. Phonological alexia and agraphia are disorders of reading and writing disproportionately affecting unfamiliar words. These disorders are almost always accompanied by aphasia. OBSERVATIONS: A 36-year-old woman underwent resection of a grade IV astrocytoma based in the left middle precentral gyrus, including a cortical site associated with speech arrest during electrocortical stimulation mapping. Following surgery, she exhibited moderate apraxia of speech and difficulty with reading and spelling, both of which improved but persisted 6 months after surgery. A battery of speech and language assessments was administered, revealing preserved comprehension, naming, cognition, and orofacial praxis, with largely isolated deficits in speech-motor planning and the spelling and reading of nonwords. LESSONS: This case describes a specific constellation of speech-motor and written language symptoms-apraxia of speech, phonological agraphia, and phonological alexia in the absence of aphasia-which the authors theorize may be attributable to disruption of a single process of motor-phonological sequencing. The middle precentral gyrus may play an important role in the planning of motorically complex phonological sequences for production, independent of output modality.