To diagnose primary progressive aphasia, a neurologist or speech and language pathologist will likely review your symptoms and order tests.
Communication problems that get worse without significant changes in thinking and behavior for a year or two is a hallmark of primary progressive aphasia.
Neurological exam
Health care providers might conduct a neurological exam, a speech-language evaluation and a neuropsychological evaluation. Tests will measure your speech, language comprehension and skills. They'll also measure your recognition and naming of objects, recall, and other factors.
Blood tests
Your health care provider might order blood tests to check for infections or look for other medical conditions. Genetic tests can determine if you have genetic changes associated with primary progressive aphasia or other neurological conditions.
Brain scans
A brain
MRI
can help diagnose primary progressive aphasia. The test can detect shrinking of specific areas of the brain.
MRI scans also can detect strokes, tumors or other conditions that affect brain function.
You also might get a positron emission tomography (PET) scan, which shows brain function. This test can uncover problems with glucose metabolism in the areas of the brain that are related to language.