DISORDERS OF LANGUAGE Flashcards

1
Q

____________ refers to the production and comprehension of words whereas
_____________ refers to the articulatory and phonetic aspects of verbal expression

A

Language

speech

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2
Q

the
silent processes of thought and the formulation in our
minds of unuttered words on which thought depends

A

inner speech, or endophasia

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3
Q

by which is meant the expression of

thought by spoken or written words and the comprehension of the spoken or written words of others

A

External

speech, or exophasia,

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4
Q

Loss or impairment of the production or comprehension
of spoken or written language because of an
acquired lesion of the brain. This is the condition
called ________

A

aphasia or dysphasia.

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5
Q

A defect in articulation with intact mental functions,
and comprehension of spoken and written language
and normal syntax (grammatical construction of sentences). The terms ___________ are applied to this category of speech disorder.

A

dysarthria and anarthria

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6
Q

An alteration or loss of voice because of a disorder

of the larynx or its innervatioN

A

aphonia or dysphonia

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7
Q

The main executive, or output, region, situated at
the posterior end of the inferior frontal convolution
(Brodmann areas 44 and 45), is referred to as ______________

A

Broca area

and is concerned with motor aspects of speech

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8
Q

visually perceived words are given
expression in writing through a fourth language area, the
so-called ____________ in the posterior part of the
second frontal convolution

A

Exner writing area

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9
Q

The perisylvian language areas are also connected
with the striatum and thalamus and with corresponding
areas in the nondominant cerebral hemisphere through
the _______ and____________

A

corpus callosum and anterior commissure

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10
Q

In general, as a restatement of the Wernicke-Broca scheme, phonologic speech output difficulties are derived from _____________
semantic-comprehension difficulties are the result of ____________

and alexia and agraphia are associated with
_____________

A

left frontal lesions;

left temporal lesions;

inferior parietal lesions.

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11
Q

__________________a procedure that produces
mutism for a minute or two, followed by misnaming,
including perseveration and substitution; misreading;
and paraphasic speech);

A

the Wada test-

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12
Q

_______________ in which different words or phonemes are presented simultaneously to the two ears (yielding a right ear-left hemisphere
advantage)

A

dichotic listening,

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13
Q

the region on the superior surface of the temporal lobe
posterior to Heschl gyri and extending to the posterior
end of the sylvian fissure, is slightly larger on the left
in 65 percent of brains and larger on the right in only
11 percent

A

planum temporale

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14
Q

Left-handedness may result from disease of the left
cerebral hemisphere in early life; this probably accounts
for its higher incidence among the ________ and _______

A

mentally retarded and

brain injured.

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15
Q

T or F

findings suggest a bilateral albeit unequal-representation of language functions in non-right-handed patients.

A

T

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16
Q

the
melody of speech, its intonation, inflection, and pauses,
all of which have emotional overtones

A

prosody

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17
Q

aprosodia localization

A

inferior division of the right middle

cerebral artery.

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18
Q

In the investigation of aphasia, it is first necessary to

inquire into the patient’s __________

A

native language, handedness,

and previous level of literacy and education.

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19
Q

More often, the language most used before the onset

of the aphasia will recover first. What law of aphasia?

A

Prite Law

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20
Q
The bedside analysis of aphasic disorders that we
find most useful entails the systematic testing of six
aspects of language function: 
1
2
3
4
5
6
A

conversational speech, comprehension,

repetition, reading, writing, and naming

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21
Q

Reading aloud single letters, words, and text

may disclose the __________

A

dissociative syndrome of pure word

blindness.

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22
Q

The patient may be unable to
repeat what is said to him, despite relatively adequate
comprehension-the hallmark of_______________

A

conduction aphasia

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23
Q

Preserved repetition is also characteristic
of _________ and occurs occasionally with
subcortical lesions

A

anomic aphasia

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24
Q

examples of this include conduction aphasia,
word deafness (auditory verbal agnosia), and word
blindness (visual verbal agnosia or alexia

A

disconnection

language syndromes,

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25
patients may repeat a few stereotyped utterances over and over again, as if compelled to do so, a disorder referred to as ____________
``` monophasia (Critchley), recurring utterance (Hughlings Jackson), verbal stereotypy, or verbal automatism. ```
26
In Broca's aphasia, speech is sparse with _________as compared with the normal 100 to 115 words per minute
10 to 15 words per | minute
27
If a patient with nonfluent Broca's aphasia has no difficulty in repetition, the condition is termed ________
transcortical | motor aphasia
28
________________ causes the patient to be wordless (mute) but leaves inner speech intact and writing undisturbed
pure word mutism (aphemia ),
29
The location of the lesion in cases of Wernicke's aphasia is the ___________ near the primary auditory cortex
left superior lateral temporal lobe
30
The substitution of one word for another ("The grass is blue") is termed____________ and is even more characteristic of Wernicke's aphasia.
verbal paraphasia or semantic substitution
31
components of the peri-sylvian region resulting wernicke's aphasia
posterosuperior temporal, supramarginal, | angular, and posterior insular gyri
32
What is the arcuate fasciculus
This fiber tract streams out of the temporal lobe, proceeding somewhat posteriorly; around the posterior end of the sylvian fissure; there it joins the superior longitudinal fasciculus, deep in the anteroinferior parietal region, and proceeds forward, deep to the suprasylvian operculum, to the motor association cortex, including the Broca and Exner areas
33
In____________ the patient suffers a deficit of auditory and visual word comprehension, making writing and reading impossible, in every way conforming to Wernicke's aphasia. Speech remains fluent, with marked paraphasia, anomia, and empty circumlocutions. However, unlike the deficit in Wernicke's and conduction aphasias, the ability to ________ is preserved
transcortical sensory aphasia repeat the spoken word
34
lesions of transcortical sensory aphasia
posterior parietooccipital | region
35
Two clinical contexts of transcortical motor aphasia (1) in a mild or partially ____________ in which repetition remains superior to conversational speech (repeating and reading aloud are generally easier than self-generated speech) and (2) in states of ________with frontal lobe damage
recovered Broca's aphasia abulia and akinetic mutism
36
impairment of auditory comprehension | and repetition and an inability to write to dictation.
pure word deafness
37
The most striking feature of this syndrome is the retained capacity to write fluently; after which the patient cannot read what has been written
alexia without agraphia
38
the individual loses the ability to understand written script, and, often, to name colors, i.e., to match a seen color to its spoken name
visual verbal color anomia
39
In alexia, In some cases, the patient manages to read single letters but not to join them together
(asyllabia).
40
lesions associated with alexia
posterior part (splenium) of the corpus callosum, wherein lie the connections between the visual association areas of the two hemispheres
41
the patient loses all capacity to speak while retaining perfectly the ability to write, to understand spoken words, to read silently with comprehension, and to repeat spoken words
Pure Word Mutism (Aph e m i a )
42
An anomie type of aphasia is often an early sign of Alzheimer and Pick disease (minor degrees of it are common in old age) and is a principal feature of one type of degenerative lobar cerebral atrophy in the category of the __________
primary progressive aphasias
43
lesions for foreign accent syndrome
The syndrome arises after a left-sided lesion, most often a stroke with a mild associated Broca's aphasia
44
Mechanisms of agraphia
there is a specific difficulty in transforming phonologic information, acquired through the auditory sense, into orthographic forms; others see it as a block between the visual form of phonemes, and the cursive movements of the hand
45
lesions of agraphia
imaging sometimes discloses a lesion of the posterior | perisylvian area
46
letters and words are formed clearly | enough but are wrongly arranged on the page
constructional agraphia .
47
language formulation is correct and the spatial arrangements of words are respected, but the hand has lost its skill in forming letters and words
apraxic agraphias.
48
types of linguistical agraphia
phonologic, lexical,and semantic types.
49
or there may be preserved ability to write nonsense words but not irregular words, such as island ___________
(lexical agraphia);
50
patients with __________ have difficulty incorporating the proper meaning into the written word, e.g., "the moon comes out at knight. "
semantic agraphia
51
Aphasia has also been described frequently with _______________, particularly if they extend laterally into the subcortical white matter of the temporal lobe and insula.
dominant striatocapsular lesions
52
``` ______ or the production of vocal sounds, is a function of the larynx, more particularly the vocal cords ```
Phonation,
53
the past, bilateral paralysis of the palate, causing nasality of speech, often occurred with _______ and ________ but now it occurs most often with _________ a form of motor neuron disease
diphtheria and poliomyelitis, progressive bulbar palsy,
54
What state is this? the jaw jerk and other facial reflexes usually become exaggerated, the palatal reflexes are retained or increased, and emotional control is impaired (spasmodic, crying, and laughing
the pseudobulbar affective state
55
_________ is a condition in which the signs of spastic and atrophic bulbar palsy are combined.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
56
A severe dysarthria that is difficult to classify, but resembles that of cerebellar disease, may occur with a left hemiplegia, usually the result of ___________
capsular or right | opercular infarction
57
rapid mumbling and cluttered utterance and slurring of words and syllables. The voice is low-pitched and monotonous, lacking both inflection and volume (hypophonia), and trailing off in volume at the ends of sentences
R i g i d ( Extra pyra m i d a l ) Dysa rt h r i a
58
Talking is loud, harsh, improperly stressed or accented, and poorly coordinated with breathing: what type of speech? Associated with what conditions?
(hyperkinetic dysarthria). chorea and myoclonus
59
The Tourette syndrome of multiple motor and vocal tics is characterized both by ____________ (barking noises, squeals, shrieks, grunting, sniffing, snorting) and by ____________, notably stuttering and the involuntary utterance of obscenities__________
startling vocalizations speech disturbances (coprolalia).
60
The speech is loud, slow, and labored; it is poorly coordinated with breathing and accompanied by facial contortions and athetotic excesses of tone in other muscles
double athetosis.
61
Scanning dysarthria, speaking metronomically as if scanning poetry for meter, is another distinctive cerebellar pattern and is most often a result of __________
mesencephalic lesions involving the | brachium conjunctivum
62
interruptions o f the | normal rhythm of speech by involuntary repetition prolongation or arrest of uttered letters or syllables
stuttering
63
Stuttering differs from ____________ in which there is repetition of a word or phrase with increasing rapidity, and from ________, in which there is an obligate repetition of words or phrases
palilalia, echolalia
64
A condition in which otherwise healthy, who lose the ability to speak quietly and fluently. Any attempt to speak results in simultaneous contraction of the speech musculature, so that the patient's voice is strained and speaking requires an effort.
spasmodic dysphonia
65
conditions associated with spasmodic dysphonia
with blepharospasm, spasmodic torticollis, writer 's | cramp, or some other type of segmental dystonia
66
The most effective tx for spasmodic dysphonia
The most effective treatment, comparable to treatment of other segmental dystonias, consists of the injection of 5 to 20 U of botulinum toxin, under laryngoscopic guidance, into each thyroarytenoid or cricothyroid muscle