, Stroke rehabilitation: A function-based approach (3rd ed., pp. 534–552). St. Louis: Elsevier Mosby.Stewart. C. & Riedel, K. (2011). Managing speech and language deficits after stroke. In Gillen, G. (Ed). Stroke Rehabilitation: A Function-Based Approach. New York: Elsevier Mosby...
a. The amount by which a sum of money falls short of the required or expected amount; a shortage: large budget deficits. b. A business loss. 3. An amount that quantifies an unfavorable condition or position: rallied from a three-game deficit to win the playoffs. [French déficit, from...
Managing Speech and Language Deficits after Stroke CeliaStewart,KarenRiedel, inStroke Rehabilitation (Fourth Edition), 2016 The Role of the Speech-Language Pathologist Across the Continuum of Care The field of speech-language pathology has a relatively long history of investigating, defining, and treati...
Tinga, A. M.et al.Multisensory stimulation to improve low-and higher-level sensory deficits after stroke: A systematic review.Neuropsych. Rev.26, 73–91 (2016). ArticleGoogle Scholar Keller, I. & Lefin-Rank, G. Improvement of visual search after audiovisual exploration training in hemianopi...
Dysarthria is usually caused by brain damage or facial paralysis that affects the muscles of the jaw, tongue, or throat, which may result in deficits in a person’s speech. It may also be caused by other conditions like Lou Gehrig’s disease, Parkinson’s, or a stroke. It’s considered...
Swallowing after right hemisphere stroke: Oral versus pharyngeal deficits Canadian Journal of Speech-Language Pathology and AudiologyTheurer, J. A., Johnston, J. L., Taves, D. H., Bach, D., Hachinski, V., and Martin, R. E. (2008). Swallowing after Right Hemisphere Stroke: Oral versus ...
61. This could be one of possible explanations for difficulties of verb production in PD. Several studies of PD document action naming deficits, thought to reflect the presence of frontal and prefrontal dysfunction62, namely in the areas of pre- and post-central gyri bilaterally, left frontal ...
F. Mapping articulatory and grammatical subcomponents of fluency deficits in post-stroke aphasia. Cogn. Affect. Behav. Neurosci. 19, 1286–1298 (2019). Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar Guenther, F. H. Neural Control of Speech (MIT, 2016). Sahin, N. T., Pinker, S., Cash,...
Managing Speech and Language Deficits after Stroke Celia Stewart, Karen Riedel, in Stroke Rehabilitation (Fourth Edition), 2016 Apraxia of Speech Apraxia, a common speech disorder resulting from a middle cerebral artery stroke, is controversial,2 because aphasiologists have described it differently acc...
, or motor planning deficits. Voice disorders may result from physical changes to thelarynxdue to edema (inflammation), nodules (from vocal misuse), orneurologic dysfunction(paralysis or spasm of the vocal folds). Disfluency (breaks in the flow of speech) may be seen in otherwise typically ...