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Brain, Vol. 123, No. 1, 74-81, January 2000
© 2000 Oxford University Press

Language lateralization in healthy right-handers

S. Knecht, M. Deppe, B. Dräger, L. Bobe, H. Lohmann, E.-B. Ringelstein and H. Henningsen

Department of Neurology, University of Münster, Germany

Correspondence to: Stefan Knecht, MD, Department of Neurology, University of Münster, Albert-Schweitzer-Straße 33, D-48129 Münster, Germany E-mail: knecht{at}uni-muenster.de

Our knowledge about the variability of cerebral language lateralization is derived from studies of patients with brain lesions and thus possible secondary reorganization of cerebral functions. In healthy right-handed subjects `atypical', i.e. right hemisphere language dominance, has generally been assumed to be exceedingly rare. To test this assumption we measured language lateralization in 188 healthy subjects with moderate and strong right-handedness (59% females) by a new non-invasive, quantitative technique previously validated by direct comparison with the intracarotid amobarbital procedure. During a word generation task the averaged hemispheric perfusion differences within the territories of the middle cerebral arteries were determined. (i) The natural distribution of language lateralization was found to occur along a bimodal continuum. (ii) Lateralization was equivalent in men and women. (iii) Right hemisphere dominance was found in 7.5% of subjects. These findings indicate that atypical language dominance in healthy right-handed subjects of either sex is considerably more common than previously suspected.

language lateralization; hemispheric dominance; aphasia; Doppler-ultrasonography

CBFV = cerebral blood flow velocity; fMRI = functional MRI; fTCD = functional transcranial Doppler-ultrasonography; MCA = middle cerebral arteries


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