The undiscovered syndrome: Macdonald Critchley’s case of semantic dementia

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Abstract

Semantic dementia is a unique clinicopathological syndrome in the frontotemporal lobar degeneration spectrum. It is characterized by progressive and relatively selective impairment of semantic memory, associated with asymmetric antero-inferior temporal lobe atrophy. Although the syndrome became widely recognized only in the 1980s, descriptions of cases with typical features of semantic dementia have been on record for over a century. Here, we draw attention to a well documented historical case of a patient with features that would have fulfilled current consensus criteria for semantic dementia, as reconstructed from the notes made by her neurologist, Macdonald Critchley, in 1938. This case raises a number of issues concerning the nosology of the semantic dementia syndrome and the potential value of archived case material.

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Witoonpanich, P., Crutch, S. J., Warren, J. D., & Rossor, M. N. (2015). The undiscovered syndrome: Macdonald Critchley’s case of semantic dementia. Neurocase, 21(4), 408–412. https://doi.org/10.1080/13554794.2014.910307

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