Speech disorders Flashcards
What is aphasia?
Difficulty with language and speech
1) Wernicke’s/receptive aphasia is caused by a lesion where?
2) What artery supplies this area?
3) How does Wernicke’s aphasia present?
4) Is comprehension impaired?
1) Superior temporal gyrus
2) Inferior division of the middle cerebral artery
3) Sentences that make no sense, word substitution and neologisms but speech remains fluent
4) Yes
1) Broca’s/expressive aphasia is caused by a lesion where?
2) What artery supplies this area?
3) How does it present?
4) Is comprehension impaired?
1) Inferior frontal gyrus
2) Superior division of the MCA
3) Non-fluent, laboured, and halting speech. Repetition is impaired
4) No
1) Conduction aphasia is caused by damage to the connection between Wernicke’s and Broca’s area - what is this connection called?
2) What classically damages this area?
3) How does it present?
4) Is comprehension impaired?
1) Arcuate fasciculus
2) Stroke affecting the arcuate fasciculus
3) Speech is fluent but repetition is poor. Aware of the errors they are making
4) No
1) What is dysarthria?
2) Name 2 causes of dysarthria
1) Difficulty with articulation due to incoordination or weakness of the muscles involved in speech production
2) Cerebellar disease, extrapyramidal disease (i.e. Parkinsonism), pseudobulbar palsy and bulbar palsy
1) What is dysphonia, and what causes it?
2) Name a cause
1) Difficulty with speech volume due to weakness of respiratory muscles or vocal cords
2) Guillain Barre syndrome, myasthenia gravis