Communication Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Aphasia

A
  • an acquired neurological impairment of processing for receptive and expressive language
  • result of brain damage, head trauma, CVA, tumor or infection
  • classified based on observation of fluent or non fluent speech
  • poor prognosis characteristics: perseveration of speech, severe auditory comprehension impairment, unreliable yes/no answers, use of empty speech without recognition of impairments
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2
Q

Fluent aphasia

A
  • involves temporal lobe, wernickes area or regions of parietal lobe
  • word output and speech production are functional
  • prosody is acceptable, but empty speech/jargon
    = speech lacks substance
  • use of neologisms

Wernickes aphasia
Conduction aphasia

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3
Q

Wenickes Aphasia

A
  • lesion: posterior region of superior temporal gyrus
  • known as receptive aphasia
  • comprehension (reading/auditory) impaired
  • good articulation
  • impaired writing
  • poor naming ability
  • motor impairment not typical
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4
Q

Conduction Aphasia

A
  • lesion: supramarginal gyrus, arcuate fasciculus
  • severe impairment with repetition
  • intact fluency, good comprehension
  • speech interrupted by word-finding difficulties
  • reading intact, writing impaired
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5
Q

Non-fluent aphasia

A
  • frequently the frontal lobe (anterior speech center) of the dominant hemisphere is affected
  • poor word output and dysprosodic speech
  • poor articulation and increased effort for speech
  • content is present, but impaired syntactical words

Brocas aphasia
Global aphasia

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6
Q

Brocas aphasia

A
  • lesion: 3rd convolution of frontal lobe
  • expressive aphasia
  • most common form
  • intact auditory and reading comprehension
  • impaired repetition and naming skills
  • paraphasias are common
  • motor impairment typical
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7
Q

Global aphasia

A
  • lesion: frontal, temporal, parietal lobes
  • comprehension is severely impaired
  • impaired naming, writing, repetition skills
  • may involuntary verbalize, usually without correct context
  • may use nonverbal skills for communication
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8
Q

Treating aphasia

A
  • cueing strategies must avoid verbal input and use tactile and visual cues
  • have only one person speak to the patient at a time
  • use concise sentences and yes/no questioning
  • allow patient adequate time to process and respond
  • allow ample time for communication during treatment
  • attempt to allow the patient to perform an activity or segment of therapy without repetitive feedback
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9
Q

verbal apraxia

A
  • non-dysarthric and non-aphasic impairment of prosody and articulation of speech
  • verbal expression is impaired secondary to deficits in motor planning
  • unable to initiate learned movement even though they understand the task
  • lesions are found in left frontal lobe
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10
Q

dysarthria

A
  • motor disorder of speech that is caused by an upper motor neuron lesion that affects the muscles used to articulate words
  • speech is slurred
  • may affect respiratory or phonatory systems due to the weakness
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