Cranial Nerves
Dysphagia
Adult Language Impairments
Motor Speech Disorders
Aphasia
100

Cranial Nerves are part of what system? (Hint: PNS or CNS)

PNS - peripheral nervous system

100

This is the gold standard evaluation tool for swallowing disorders.

VFSS video fluoroscopic swallow study

Modified Barium Swallow

100
F.A.S.T is an acronym for recognizing the key symptoms of a stroke (CVA) and the letters stand for:

F.A.S.T

Face, Arms, Speech, and Time

100

When children know exactly what they want to say, but they cannot move their lips and tongue to produce the target sounds.

Apraxia

Childhood Apraxia of Speech

100

A type of aphasia leaving a patient groping for the right words.

Non-fluent aphasia
200

This cranial nerve controls chewing. (Hint: Provides the innervation to the maxillary and mandibular areas)

Trigeminal V cranial nerve

200

The swallowing mechanism involves four stages: oral _______, ___________, pharyngeal, and ________.

Oral preparatory, Oral, Pharyngeal, Esophageal

200

This memory skill or function involves remembering and followed a sequence of more complex tasks.

Executive Functioning Skills

200

What systems of speech production are impacted by dysarthria?

Respiratory, Phonatory, Articulatory

200

A type of aphasia with the patient saying many words at a time that mean absolutely nothing.

Receptive - Fluent Aphasia

300

This cranial nerve controls your smile.

Facial nerve CN VII

300

This is when food passes through the vocal cords and right into the airway.

Aspiration
300

This is another word for word finding difficulties.

Anomia

300

This diagnosis comes with muscle weakness of the articulators.

Dysarthria

300

This stroke happens in the left posterior frontal lobe.

Broca's aphasia

400

This cranial nerve controls our vocal cords and our swallow?

Vagus X cranial nerve

400

This is when we see, smell, feel hungry when we are around food and getting ready to eat.

Oral preparatory phase

400

Increased loss of working memory, minimal conversational speech, diminished vocabulary, and at times inappropriate behavior are characteristics of Stage II of this disease.

Alzheimer's Disease

400

This diagnosis comes with disrupted planning/programming of muscles for speech production.

Apraxia

400

This stroke happens in the left superior temporal lobe.

Wernicke's aphasia

500

This cranial nerve provides the primary motor innervation to the tongue.

The Hypoglossal Nerve (CN XII)

500

When someone has difficulty in the trigger of a swallow, it involves this phase.

Pharyngeal phase

500

Sticking to one topic at a time, using short/simple sentences, speaking slowly, and allowing a person to ask questions are strategies for patients with __________________ .

Dementia

500

This is a beside evaluation to screen a patient's speech production and the strength/range of motion of articulators.

Oral-Peripheral Exam

500

Communication techniques to assist a person who has had a stroke and struggling with receptive and expressive language include speaking clearly, not getting frustrated, ______________, and __________.

Insert short pauses

Have person watch your face/lips when you speak.