Terminology
Paraphasias
Non Fluent Aphasia
Fluent Aphasias
Subcortical Aphasias
100

agrammatism vs paragrammatism

speech has nouns and verbs but omission of function words

P:errors made in use of grammatical elements rather than omission

100

semantic paraphasia vs formal aphasia

give an example!

semantically related word/synonym is substituted pig for sheep

formal: sound/phonologically similar 

dog for dock


100

characteristics of Broca's

-agrammatism, apraxia, single word better than sentence production, preservation of auditory comprehension, writing impairment, reading comprehension impaired, reading aloud poor, trouble putting sentences together, repeat words often

100

which one is the most rare?

transcortical sensory aphasia

100

how do we diagnose these?

CT scans or other imaging methods let us see the subcortical structures of the brain

200

jargon

lengthy fluent utterances syntactically okay but makes no sense

200
name the 3 classical types

verbal-real word substitution 

literal-partially recognized word paker for paper 

neologistic- non sense word

200

which is the most rare?

transcortical motor

200

characteristics of anomic aphasia

can be evolution/recovery of Wernicke's or conduction, word finding difficulty, verbal expression pretty good fluent with appropriate syntax, preservation of auditory comprehension, circumlocutions, reading and writing impairments variable

200

BONUS QUESTION who developed the model that the classical view of aphasia is based on

Wernicke Lichteim model

300

apraxia versus dysarthria

D: motor speech disorder-impaired muscular control related to weakness, slowness, incoordination

A: MSD resulting in difficulty programming positioning of articulators
300

mixed 

give an example!

both semantically and phonologically similar 

example: cow for cat

300

characteristics of transcortical motor aphasia

rare, repetition intact, other production abilities impaired similar to Broca's, auditory comp relatively spared, word finding difficulty variable, preservation of memorized material, occasional breakthroughs of fluent speech

300
characteristics of transcortical sensory aphasia

preservation of repetition, otherwise similar to Wernicke's, echolalia repetition of questions instead of responding to them, not understanding communication partner does not understand them

300
characteristics of nonthalamic aphasia -anterior type

lesions in subcortical structures not thalamus, 

anterior-Broca's with slow poorly articulated speech, but have intact grammatical form unlike Broca's

400

paraphasia versus verbal stereotype

unintentional substitution of a word or non word

VS: exclusive use of one utterance over and over

400

unrelated 

give an example

real word that is neither semantically or phonologically related 

example: banana for camp

400

characteristics of global aphasia

all aspects of language impaired, comprehension impaired, little to no verbal output, stereotyped utterances, comprehension good only for personal info, expression through facial, vocal and manual gestures

400

characteristics of Wernicke's aphasia

impaired auditory comprehension, fluent articulation, jargon good syntax, naming and repetition poor, all kinds of paraphasias, writing impairment similar to speech impairment, reading comprehension impaired

400

characteristics of non thalamic -posterior type

similar to wernicke's

500

anomia versus agnosia

word finding difficulties characterized by circomlocutions

agnosia:inability to recognize a stimulus even though sensory transmission is intact

500

non word 

give an example

non word substitution 

example: kamer for camel

500

characteristics of mixed nonfluent aphasias

border zone between Broca's and global, sparse verbal output, auditory comprehension impaired, some partially recovered patients with global aphasia

500

characteristics of conduction aphasia

repetition impaired, phonemic paraphasias, verbal expression and fluency only minorly impaired, auditory comprehension mildly impaired, many self corrections

500

characteristics of thalamic aphasia

thalamic lesions, can resolve over time, good comprehension, fluent semantic paraphasias and neologisms, sparing of repetition, impairment can be limited to word retrieval difficulties and these can be category specific

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