Higher Cortical Function: Language Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between language and speech?

A

Speech is verbal language, the major component of language
Written language and gesture are included in language
Therefore speech loss does not necessarily mean language loss

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2
Q

What are the major components of speech?

A
  • understanding

- expressing

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3
Q

What are the three major anatomical speech areas?

A
  • inferior frontal gyrus (Broca’s Area)
  • superior temporal gyrus (Wernicke’s Area)
  • arcuate fasciculus (perisylivian region), which connect the superior temporal surfs with the inferior frontal gyrus
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4
Q

How is handidness related to speech?

A
  • the cortical are of speech is in the dominant hemisphere
  • left hemisphere in right-handed people
  • left hemisphere in 60-70% of left-handed people
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5
Q

What are the inputs into the speech areas?

A
  • motor input from corticobulbar pathway, cerebellum and basal ganglia
  • cranial nerve input such as CN X (supplies larynx), CN XII (supplied tongue)
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6
Q

List the apparatus of speech, both mechanical and cognitive

A
Mechanical 
- muscles as bellows 
- larynx as voice generator 
- oropharynx and sinuses as modulators 
- phrenic nerve and intercostals 
Cognitive
- auditory recognition areas of brain 
- speech generating cortex 
- lower cranial nerve 
- cerebellum, basal ganglia and brainstem as modulator
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7
Q

List the speech components and the conditions that they result in

A
  • phonation (sound and volume) –> aphonia or dysphonia
  • articulation of speech –> dysarthria
  • compression or production of language –> aphasia/dysphasia
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8
Q

Describe the characteristics of aphonia/dysphonia

A
  • low volume of speech
  • absence of spoken language in extreme cases
  • muscle weakness
  • vocal cord paralysis
  • can still wet or gesture accurately
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9
Q

Describe the characteristics of dysarthria/anarthria

A
  • failure of articulation
  • slurring but content is normal (can sound drunk)
  • weakness of the muscle required for speech production
  • partial vocal cord paralysis
  • oropharyngeal e.g. Motor Neurone Disease
  • badly fitting dentures
  • cerebrally or brainstem pathology - cerebellar ataxia and Parkinson’s
  • can still write or gesture accurately
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10
Q

List all the names for expressive aphasia?

What are the characteristics of expressive dysphasia?

A

Expressive = motor aphasia, nonfluent aphasia, Broca’s aphasia, anterior aphasia)

  • patients comprehension is preserved
  • speech is not fluent
  • lesion in the inferior formal gyrus in the dominant (left) hemisphere
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11
Q

List all the names for receptive aphasia?

What are the characteristics of expressive dysphasia?

A

Receptive = sensory, fluent, Wernicke’s, posterior

  • patients comprehension in impaired
  • speech is very fluent but does not make any sense (unitelligable)
  • patient could be mislabelled as confused
  • lesion in the super temporal gyrus in the dominant (left) hemisphere
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12
Q

What is the problem if only repetition is impaired? What is this called?

A
  • isolated impairment in repetition is called conductive aphasia
  • usually due to a lesion in the arcuate fasciculus
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13
Q

What are the components of clinical examination?

A

The two most important aspects in examination of speech are comprehension and fluency. These should be examined together by:

  • -> Asking questions
  • What is your address?
  • What do you do for a living?
  • What did you have for breakfast today?
  • Ask to describe your job
  • -> Giving commands
  • simple and then increase complexity as appropriate
  • close your eyes
  • show me your right hand
  • close you right eye and touch your left ear with your right right
  • -> Assessing repetition
  • ask the patient to repeat a simple word such as pen or watch
  • try a full sentence - ‘it is very cold today’
  • try a complicated phrase - ‘no ifs, ands or buts’
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