Speech Problems Flashcards
Dysphasia:
What is it?
What does aphasia mean?
What is the most common cause?
How do you know a patient has confusion instead of dysphasia?
A deficit in the higher language functions
A total absence of speech
LACS
If speech is internally consistent but nonsense
Receptive dysphasia:
Another name?
Where is the lesion?
What will the patient not be able to do?
Wernicke’s dysphasia
Temporal lobe lesion
The patient can’t follow a command (e.g. life a hand)
Expressive dysphasia:
Another name?
Where is the lesion?
What will the patient not be able to do?
Broca’s lesion
Frontal lobe lesion
Can’t generate speech
Nominal aphasia (dysnomia):
Where is the lesion?
What will the patient not be able to do?
Dominent posterior temporo-parietal lesion
Difficulty recalling specific words or names, but the rest of speech is normal
Patients may not be able to name objects shown to them
Dysarthria:
What is it?
Causes? - 3
What is done in the cranial nerve exam to test this?
Poor articulation
Bulbar palsy
Pseudobulbar palsy
Facial nerve palsy - rare
Bulbar function:
- Test tongue - la la la
- Palate - ka ka ka
Facial nerve function:
- Lips - ma ma ma
Dysphonia:
What is it?
Causes:
- A type of palsy
- 2 neurodegenerative diseases
- A nerve associated with the voice
Reduced speech volume due to weak respiratory muscles or vocal cords.
(Pseudo)bulbar palsy
Myasthenia gravis
Parkinson’s
Recurrent laryngeal nerve invasion
Bulbar and pseudobulbar palsy:
What does ‘bulb’ refer to?
What 3 symptoms do you get with these palsies?
Refers to the medulla - dysfunction of cranial nerves 9-12
Dysphonia
Dysarthria
Dysphagia
Bulbar palsy:
What is it?
Causes - read
Distinguishing feature:
- Tongue - 2
LMN lesion of the medulla (nuclei) or cranial nerve fibres
Brainstem stroke or tumour MND - progressive bulbar palsy Guillain-Barre Myasthenia gravis Surgery, radiotherapy
Fasciculating tongue which sits on one side of the mouth
Pseudobulbar palsy:
What is it?
Causes? - read
Do you get bi/unilateral defects?
What happens to the tongue?
Because this also involves all the motor cranial nerves, what signs may you also get?
UMN lesion of the corticobulbar tract - commoner than bulbar palsy
Stroke
MS
MND
Syphilis
Bilateral defects
Paralysed tongue with Donald duck speech
Hyperreflexia (Jaw jerk, gag reflex)
Facial paralysis