A case of recurrent hemiplegia due to saccular aneurysm of the left posterior cerebral artery in a female infant is described. The diagnosis was made at angiography, prompted by CT detection of a hyperdense, intra-aneurysmal thrombus, and was confirmed at subsequent surgery.
The present study deals with observations on the "speech evoked potential"-a late positive potential evoked by word repetition. These potentials, evoked by "silent" repetition of polysyllabic words, were averaged and recorded from the scalp overlying the inferior frontal regions on both sides in 20 normal healthy subjects of ages ranging from 13-58 years. The potential had a triphasic negative, positive, negative morphology and was present over both hemispheres in left as well as right handed subjects. The main positive deflection and mean latencies of 219.2 msec and 221.6 msec and mean amplitude of 6.2 muv and 6.5 muv respectively on the left and right sides. Though there were interindividual variations in latency, amplitude and morphology, there was a high degree of intraindividual similarity and reproducibility in subjects. The variations in these parameters with age, sex and handedness are discussed. In 10 patients with cerebral lesions, the evoked potential was normal in 5 cases with right frontal lesions and showed abnormalities in 3 of 5 cases with left frontal lesions. The speech evoked potential may be useful in the further study of electrical correlates of speech output in speech disorders.