The objectives of this study were to test (i) If stroke patients with expressive Aphasia could learn to up-regulate the Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent (BOLD) signal in language areas of the brain, namely Inferior Frontal Gyrus (Broca's area) and Superior Temporal Gyrus (Wernicke's area),...
Strokes are the most common causes of aphasia, accounting for more than 50 percent of aphasia cases. When a stroke prevents blood from reaching the language areas of the brain, it can cause damage or even death to these brain structures....
D. Expressive aphasia C. Receptive aphasia is the lack of comprehension of both verbal and written language. Dysarthria is disturbance in muscular control of speech. In fluent dysphasia speech is present but contains little meaningful communication. Expressive aphasia is the loss of the production of...
2. Expressive aphasia is a condition in which the client understands what is heard or written but cannot say what he or she wants to say. A communication or picture board helps the client communicate with others in that the client can point to objects or activities that he or she desires....
Case Report: We describe the case of a 35-year-old female physician who presented to our Emergency Department (ED) in severe hemodynamic compromise, with an altered level of consciousness and major expressive aphasia 1 day after undergoing a leg varicosal stripping procedure under regional ...
Independent researchshows that using Tactus Therapy apps for just20 minutes a dayfor 4 weeks can causesignificant improvementsin stroke survivors with chronic aphasia. Now that’s powerful! Read More Thank you for helping others. Here’s a free gift for you. ...
Both groups included only aphasia types according to the classification of MOTOR (expressive) and SENSORY (receptive) aphasia and dysphasia. The obtained data indicated that motor dysphasia is the most common speech disorder. Aphasic speech disorders proved to be more prevalent among the male than ...
11. The nurse identifies the nursing diagnosis of impaired verbal communication for a patient with expressive aphasia. An appropriate nursing intervention to help the patient communicate is to 1. ask simple questions that can be answered with "yes" or "no." ...
66.7%; parentn = 1, 33.3%). Stroke survivors were aged 54.8 (SD 12.7), malen = 4 (44.4%), 23 (IQR 28) months post-stroke and educated to college level (or higher)n = 8 (88.9%); all were Caucasian; one (11.1%) had mild/moderate expressive aphasia (see Table1)....
The catastrophic reaction appears to be a specific consequence of the intense frustration and perceived loss associated with an expressive aphasia. This may help explain the reportedly higher incidence of depression in left frontal strokes. 展开 ...