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APHASIA. What is it?  “Acquired language dysfunction due to neurological injury or disease”  Most common cause is stroke (about 25-40% of stroke patients.

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Presentation on theme: "APHASIA. What is it?  “Acquired language dysfunction due to neurological injury or disease”  Most common cause is stroke (about 25-40% of stroke patients."— Presentation transcript:

1 APHASIA

2 What is it?  “Acquired language dysfunction due to neurological injury or disease”  Most common cause is stroke (about 25-40% of stroke patients acquire aphasia)  Other causes include head injury, brain tumor, and degenerative neurological disease  Can be a symptom of epilepsy  Aphasia affects about one million Americans (1 in 250 people)  More than 100,000 Americans acquire the disorder each year  More common than Parkinson's Disease, cerebral palsy or muscular dystrophy

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4 Common Symptoms  Problems talking  Speaking in short, fragmented phrases  Putting words in the wrong order  Using incorrect grammar  Switching sounds or words  Speaking in nonsense  Anomia (word-finding problems; words "on the tip of the tongue")  Problems understanding oral language  Needing extra time to process language  Difficulty following very fast speech  Taking the literal meaning of a figure of speech  Problems reading  Problems writing

5 Associated Brain Anatomy  90% of individuals are left hemisphere dominant for language  Expressive language = inferior frontal lobe  Receptive language = inferior temporo-parietal cortex  Non-dominant hemisphere plays significant role in prosodic aspects of language  Expressive prosody = non-dominant frontal lobe  Receptive prosody = non-dominant temporo- parietal lobe

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7 Types of Aphasias Nonfluent Aphasias 1.Global Aphasia 2.Mixed Transcortical Aphasia 3.Broca’s Aphasia 4.Transcortical Motor Aphasia Fluent Aphasias 1.Wernicke’s Aphasia 2.Transcortical Sensory Aphasia 3.Conduction Aphasia 4.Anomic Aphasia

8 Broca’s Aphasia Lesion

9 Broca’s Aphasia  Fluency : almost a complete lack of coherent speech to slow halting speech with few content words and few verbs or adjectives.  Comprehension : Comprehension of single words, short phrases, and reading intact. The more grammatically complex, the more impairments  Repetition, Naming, Writing : Impaired Broca’s Aphasia Patient taking the Boston Naming Test

10 Wernicke’s Aphasia Lesion

11 Wernicke’s Aphasia  Fluency : Speech is fluent, but unintelligible. Speech output is effortless, rapid, and sentence length is normal, but content is unintelligible  Comprehension : Impaired - typically have trouble answering yes/no questions and following one-step commands  Repetition and Naming : Impaired  Writing : Letters are being written, but content is unintelligible Patient with Wernicke’s Aphasia

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13 Treatment  Depends on a variety of factors:  Age  Type of aphasia  Cause of aphasia  Position and size of brain lesion

14 Treatments  Speech and language Therapy (most common)  Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT)  Melodic intonation of words  Rhythmic tapping of each syllable using the left hand while phrases are repeated  Art Therapy  Visual Speech Perception Therapy – associating pictures with words  Family Counseling  Medications to improve blood flow in the brain ABC News Clip – Music Therapy

15 Healthy non-musician Healthy professional singer Patient with chronic non-fluent aphasia before MIT Patient with chronic non-fluent aphasia after MIT

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