Auditory agnosia caused by a tectal germinoma
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To the Editor:
The report by Pan et al.1 and the five earlier reports they cite highlight the importance of subcortical processing of acoustic data for understanding of spoken language. The inferior colliculus was the primary site of injury in each report, and all of the patients had normal comprehension of spoken language before their affliction.
The inferior colliculus was prominently damaged in experiments with monkeys subjected to asphyxia at birth.2,3 The importance of this finding has gone unrecognized because it was a surprise discovery during an attempt to create an animal model of cerebral palsy. Myers claimed that ischemic brainstem injury (most severe …
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