Speech pathology needs Flashcards
What are the adult disorders related to speech pathology?
- Aphasia/Right Sided Brain Damage - Disorders Associated with Aphasia: Dysarthria, Apraxia, Dysphagia, Visual Field Cuts
- Cognitive Deficits
- Stuttering
- Voice Disorders
- Laryngectomy
- Hearing
A general impairment of language functioning, not intellectual functioning, associated with localized cerebral pathology
aphasia
- Therapy consists of reprogramming the brain for language function, using strengths to feed the weaknesses, and keeping information relevant to the patient’s needs
A general impairment causing inappropriate speech, lack of facial and vocal expression, inattention, orientation/memory disturbances, perceptual problems, flat affect and lack of humor
right-sided brain damage
- Therapy consists of increasing the patient’s ability to orient to person, place, and time, their memory skills, perceptual skills, and ability to socialize
What are tips and strategies for auditory comprehension?
- Make sure that the patient can see and hear you.
- Make sure background noise is kept to a minimum.
- Use gestures, pictures, objects or written notes to communicate.
- Use concrete words, phrases and one step directives.
- Emphasize key words when speaking to the patient.
- Speak at a normal conversational level of loudness…the patient’s difficulty is understanding language, not loss of hearing.
- Watch for signs of understanding…the patient may grimace or say something inappropriate.
- Repeat information as needed. Repeat information in a different way.
- Be patient! The patient’s comprehension may fluctuate due to fatigue.
What are tips and strategies for reading comprehension?
- Cover text so that only one line is visible at a time.
- Encourage the use of an augmentative device.
- Encourage the use of books on tape.
- Read printed materials together…discuss newspaper headlines.
What are tips and strategies for verbal expressions?
- Be patient!
- Treat the patient as an adult, not a child…do not talk down to him/her. Remember intelligence is generally intact, communication is the problem.
- The main goal is communication, not perfect speech.
- Repeat what you understand to clarify the patient’s message.
- Be flexible – if it works use it!
What are tips and strategies for vague responses?
- Repeat what you know and ask yes/no questions.
- Ask for more information.
- Encourage use of different modalities.
- Note facial expressions and intonation.
- Let the patient know what he is attempting to communicate is important to you.
- Take a break and try again later.
What are tips and strategies for jargon?
- Ask yes/no questions.
2. Ask the patient to try another method of communication: gesturing, drawing, writing, etc.
What are tips and strategies for written expression?
- Hold the paper in place.
- Rewrite the parts of the word you know and encourage the patient to continue.
- Provide the patient with written information he can carry with him…name, address and phone number
A weakness of paralysis of the muscles used to produce speech.
dysarthria
- Therapy consists of strengthening the muscles used to produce speech.
An inability to produce a word, phrase, or sentence voluntarily, due to an inability to “recall” how to place the tongue, lips, and other parts of the speech mechanism in the correct position; The patient may be speechless, may use unintelligible garbled speech, or may use the same word or phrase for every verbal attempt
apraxia
- Therapy consists of increasing voluntary movements
An inability to swallow
dysphagia
- Therapy consists of increasing the patient’s ability to swallow by changing diet texture, method of hydration, head or body positioning, and using various therapy techniques
An inability to see a specific visual field
visual field cuts
- Therapy consists of teaching the patient to compensate for the field cut by changing head position and using various therapy techniques
- A referral to the physician may be required
An impairment to the brain bilaterally, causing impairments of language and intellect, inattention, orientation/memory disturbances, difficulty with problem solving/abstract reasoning, disorganization, and executive function deficits (ie: inability to plan, initiate, and execute tasks, lack of awareness and inability to self-regulate)
cognitive deficits due to TBI
- Therapy consists of increasing the patient’s ability to orient to person, place, and time, their memory skills, organization and problem solving skills, and ability to self regulate
- If deficits are unlikely to improve the patient’s family and/or caregiver is provided with suggestions on how to adapt the environment
An inability to speak fluently due to the use of repetitions, prolongations, blocks, fillers, concomitant behaviors
stuttering
- Therapy consists of increasing the patient’s ability to speak fluently using various therapy techniques