The Nervous System & The Brain
Aphasia
TBI & Cognitive Impairment
Fluency Disorders
Voice & Resonance Disorders
100

What is the basic unit of the nervous system?

Neuron

100

What is the most common cause of aphasia?

Stroke

100

What is a disruption in normal functioning caused by a blow or penetrating injury to the head?

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)

100

What is the most common form of stuttering?

Developmental stuttering (begins in preschool years, many children are unaware of their stutter)

100

What happens to the vocal folds when we change pitch?

The vocal folds change in length & tension

200

What are the components of the brain?

Cerebrum, cerebellum, and brainstem

200

Speaking in short sentences with agrammatism, labored speech with articulation/phonological errors, and difficulty with writing is characteristic of which type of aphasia?

Broca's Aphasia (nonfluent aphasia)

200

Term describing both pathological conditions and syndromes that result in declining of memory and at least one other cognitive ability

Cognitive Impairment

Impacted cognitive abilities:

Attention
Orientation
Abstract thinking
Executive function including reasoning/judgment, problem solving, organization, sequencing and/or planning

200

How many repetitions of a sound/word is considered stuttering?

More than 2

200

Fluid filled lesions that develop when blood vessels rupture and swell are...

Vocal Polyps
300

For most individuals, where is language processed in the brain?

The Left Hemisphere

300

Fluent but at times incoherent speech and rapid-fire speech rate are characteristic of which type of aphasia?

Wernicke's Aphasia (fluent aphasia)

300

What are the leading causes of TBI?

Falls
Motor vehicle accidents
Blows to the head (as in sports)
Assaults

300

Which fluency shaping technique aims to reduce speech rate, which in turn reduces stuttering?

Prolonged Speech

300

Which cranial nerve is responsible for vocal fold paralysis?

CN X - Vagus (recurrent branch)

400

The space where electrochemical impulses pass between the axon of one neuron to the dendrites of another

Synapse

400

Profound language deficits in all capacities (both receptive and expressive)

Global/mixed Aphasia

400

Characteristics of subcortical cognitive impairments

May accompany multiple sclerosis (MS), AIDS-related encephalopathy, and Parkinson and Huntington diseases


Slow, progressive deterioration of cognitive functioning


400

Which fluency shaping technique focuses on reduced rate of speech AND reduced physical tension before and during instances of stuttering?

Light articulatory contacts

400

Red ulcerations on the posterior surface of the vocal folds

Contact Ulcers

500

Incoming language (listening) is processed in what part of the brain?

Wernicke's Area

500

The most frequent linguistic gains post stroke are typically in

auditory comprehension

500

Irreversible cognitive impairment

Alzheimer disease (AD), vascular cognitive
impairment/multi-infarct dementia, or mixed causes

500

When an individual completes the stuttered word and then deliberately pauses for at least 3 seconds, then tries to produce the word again.

Cancellation Phase

500

How would you treat spasmodic dysphonia?

Botox Injection

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