List any 2 features of transcortical motor aphasia.
It is a nonfluent type of aphasia.
It is associated with relatively intact repetition skills.
It is associated with damage around the supplementary motor cortex.
It is associated with deficits in language expression with relatively intact language comprehension.
List any 2 features of aphasia associated with anterior damage to internal capsule putamen.
It can be associated with severe form of dysarthric articulation, mild repetition problems, moderate naming or word-finding problems, some auditory comprehension problems, and severe writing and moderate reading problems
Name any two cortical structures and any two subcortical structures of human brain.
Cortical: Frontal lobe, temporal lobe, occipital lobe, parietal lobe
Subcortical: Diencephalon (including hypothalamus and thalamus), cerebellum, hippocampus, pituitary gland, and basal ganglia.
(True or False) Apraxia and aphasia are both language disorders.
False
Broca's aphasia OR
Global aphasia OR
Transcortical motor aphasia
Name any one example of borderline aphasia affecting the basal ganglia structures.
Anterior damage to internal capsule or putamen OR
Posterior damage to capsule and putamen OR
Anterior and posterior damage to thalamus
Broca's area, Premotor cortex, Motor cortex, Orbitofrontal cortex, Primary motor cortex, Frontal premotor association area (prefrontal cortex)
Name a neurogenic language disorder.
Aphasia
What is the difference between conduction aphasia and transcortical sensory aphasia?
Conduction aphasia- poor repetition skills; caused by damage to supramarginal gyrus, Wernicke's area, and underlying white matter pathways
Transcortical sensory aphasia- good repetition skills; caused by damage to posterior-parietotemporal areas
Broca's aphasia: Relatively less severe; caused by damage surrounding Broca's area
Global aphasia: More severe; caused by damage to multiple areas and diffuse damage
What is the difference between right and left cerebral hemisphere?
List two differences between aphasia and dysarthria.
Aphasia- neurogenic language disorder, most likely caused by stroke
Dysarthria- neurogenic speech disorder, common causes include stroke, falls, cancer