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Aphasia TU Comps 2012
Aphasia TU Comps 2012
96
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Graduate
01/03/2012

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Term
gray matter
Definition
cell bodies- cortex, parts of cerebellum, subcortical structures
Term
white matter
Definition
myelinated nerve fibers
Term
Association fibers
Definition
within hemisphere
Term
Commissural fibers
Definition
one hemisphere to the other (e.g. corpus callosum)
Term
Projection fibers
Definition
within the hemisphere and then project out
Term
Arcuate fasiculus
Definition
white matter pathway Wernicke’s to Broca’s
Term
Upper Motor Neurons
Definition
e.g. corticobulbar tract; corticospinal tract
Term
Lower Motor Neurons
Definition
e.g. cranial nerves, spinal nerves, final common pathway (no other way to get information to muscle of information to go back up)
Term
connecting fiber most important for speech/expressive language
Definition
association fiber
Term
capillaries
Definition
tiny blood vessel for each neuron
-silk is to corn as capillary is to neuron
Term
angiogram
Definition
sees what the blood looks like in your head
Term
Blood Supply
oNormal
Definition
blood flows easily through clear artery
Term
Blood Supply
oBlockage
Definition
plaque fragment and/or blood clot blocks artery, reducing blood flow to the brain possibly causing a stroke
Term
Blood Supply
oBlockage cleared
Definition
the plaque or blood clot dissolves or breaks up quickly, restoring blood flow to the brain this may occur during a TIA with brain cells recovering and no permanent brain damage occurring
Term
Ischemic Stroke
Definition
occurs when an embolus or thrombus lodges in an artery that supplies the brain, blocking the flow of oxygen-rich blood. If nearby blood vessels cannot deliver enough blood to that area supplied by blocked artery, brain cells begin to die and some body functions are impaired
Term
Hemorrhagic Stroke
Intracerebral Hemorrhage)
Definition
hemorrhages that are caused by bleeding from blood vessels within the brain are called intracerebral. High blood pressure may cause small blood vessels to bulge and eventually burst spilling blood into the brain. The bleeding damages brain cells and the damaged area cannot function properly.
Term
Aphasia is
Definition
secondary to stroke (sequelae); language impairments result of a stroke
Term
After 10 seconds without oxygen
Definition
unconscious
Term
After 20 seconds without oxygen
Definition
no electrical activity
Term
After a few minutes without oxygen
Definition
irreversible damage usually begins
Term
Arterial supply has what two branches
Definition
1- internal carotids; 2- vertebral arteries
Term
Anterior Cerebral Artery (ACA)
Definition
oruns….?medially then enters longitudinal fissure; arches back to supply medial aspects of frontal and parietal lobes; some branches extend into watershed surface of hemisphere
olesion=restricted contralateral motor and sensory deficits o innervated by ICA
Term
Anterior Choroidal Artery
Definition
ooriginates from:ICA (rarely from MCA)
osupplies:optic chiasm, optic tract, lateral geniculate body, corpus striatum
olesion=contralateral hemiplegia
Term
Medial cerebral artery (MCA)
Definition
Supplied by ICA
ogoes…? laterally into lateral sulcus
osupplies?insula, lateral surface of cerebral hemisphereolesion= major motor and sensory deficits
oif Left hemisphere? severe language deficits
Term
Posterior Cerebral Artery (PCA)
Definition
Supplied by vertebral-basilar
oinnervates….? medial and inferior surfaces of occipital and temporal lobes, cerebellum o lesion= primarily visual deficits
Term
Anterior Communicating Artery (ACoA) and
Posterior Communicating Artery (PCoA)
Definition
typically have little pressure/flow
•When needed ACoA and PCoA can act as connectors to complete the Circle of Willis
ocan actually enlarge to accommodate extra flow
Term
external carotids
Definition
supply the face
Term
Definition for Aphasia
Definition
A general language deficit that crosses all language modalities and may be complicated by other sequelae of brain damage (Schuell et al., 1964, p.113)
Term
Broca
Definition
-where? inferior frontal gyrus, unilateral
-generally = speech production
Term
Wernicke
Definition
-where? posterior STG (superior temporal gyrus), posterior to PAC (primary auditory cortex)
-what does it do? storage and retrieval of mental representations of words, grammar, and linguistic rules
Term
Primary Auditory Cortex PAC
Definition
- aka? heschl’s gyrus
- what does it do?
perception and discrimination of auditory stimuli
Term
V1
Definition
-primary visual cortex
-important to discuss with aphasia because vision is important for reading and writing
Term
Angular gyrus
Definition
-Association area of association areas; allow for associations between vision, touch, and hearing; alexia (loss of the ability to read) without agraphia (loss of the ability to write)
Term
Comprehension of speech- pathway is
Definition
-ears to ascending fibers to primary auditory cortex (PAC; encode acoustic information) to Wernickes area
-role of corpus collosum? information from hemisphere to hemisphere
-Wernickes finds meanings and consults rules
-literal vs. figurative
-send appropriate response signal
Term
Reading- pathway is
Definition
-V1 (primary visual cortex) to angular gyrus to Wernicke then same as auditory comprehension
Term
Spontaneous speech- pathway is
Definition
-Wernicke (remember FCU- prefrontal cortex- ideation) to arcuate fasciculus to Broca to PMC (primary motor cortex)
-PMC to insular cortex (deep)
-Pyramidal tract to cranial nerves (CN)
-Wernicke’s monitors
Term
watershed area-less damage because
Definition
because area still getting some blood
Term
pathway in brain from hearing something to answering: 5 steps
Definition
1. primary auditory cortex (heschl’s)
2. prefrontal cortex
3. Wernicke
4. Broca
5. Primary Motor Cortex
Term
From most likely to impair to least
Definition
1. posterior part of left superior temporal lobe
2. primary auditory cortex in left temporal lobe
3. low on left primary motor strip
4.superior part of left primary sensory strip (post-central gyrus)
Term
Broca’s Aphasia
Definition
monotone, nonfluent, telegraphic speech, poor writing, may have subtle impairments in comprehension
Term
Wernicke’s Aphasia
Definition
paraphasias, fluent, blur word meaning (good/wonderful), impaired ST retention/recall, normal intonation, handwriting resembles speech, few are hemiplegic, may see visual deficits (optic fiber pathways)
Term
paraphasisas= speech errors
Definition
-literal/phonemic paraphasia=phonetic errors (pattern of articulation errors though not dysarthric)
-semantic/verbal=semantically related (mix up meaning)
-Also see perseverations=unintentional substitutions; perseverate on certain words
Term
Global Aphasia
Definition
usually trunk of MCA, severely impaired, may be socially appropriate (different diagnosis between dementia and aphasia)
Term
Conduction Aphasia
Definition
olocation? arcuate fasciculus
omain symptom? no repetition
owhat is spared? PAC and Wernicke
oincreased difficulty with?
task difficulty (bo, boom, boomer, boomerang)
oimpaired?reading aloud
oauditory comprehension?
good- the connection between Wernicke and Broca is what is affected
Term
Transcortical Sensory
MCA watershed area; high parietal lobe
Definition
orepetition? good
omuch better conversationalists (no frontal lobe involvement)
omay see echolalia
odeficits in…auditory comprehension and reading comprehension due to isolation of Wernicke’s area- limited information gets through
omost patients are unaware of errors
ono attempts to self-correct
ocan repeat of read along long sentences but cannot comprehend
Term
Transcortical Mixed
Definition
olocation? damage that not only spares the major areas, but isolates each area- usually caused by IC artery stenosis
oisolation of the speech area?
ocan repeat but profound impairment with all else
omay see automatic speech with?
rhymes/songs
Term
Transcortical Motor
anterior superior frontal lobe of language dominant hemisphere
Definition
oreduced? speech output
ogood repetition and auditory comprehension
odifficulty with initiation (frontal lobe)
oRight hemiparesis present?
ogood comprehension, repetition, and oral reading
opoor conversationalists (short sentences, delays, once going through, may be good)
Term
Anomia
Definition
impaired word retrieval in speech and writing; fluent speech but with word finding problems; see pauses, circumlocution, substitution of nonspecific words (e.g. thing, it)
Term
Apraxia
Definition
limb, oral, speech- could be present; voluntary/volitional motor impairment
Term
Agnosias
Definition
generic label group of perceptual impairments where patient fails to recognize specific stimuli: visual, auditory, tactile
Term
Prosopagnosia
Definition
cannot recognize faces
Term
Color agnosia
Definition
cannot discriminate between colors
Term
Simultanagnosia
Definition
cannot recognize a whole image although individual deficits are seen
Term
Somatosensory agnosia
Definition
cannot perceive objects through tactile stimulation
Term
Receptive amusia
Definition
inability to hear music
Term
Anosagnosia
Definition
denial of illness
Term
Assessment
•2 primary activities
Definition
1 Assimilation of information;
2 Clinical decision making
Term
Assessment
•Steps (7)
Definition
1. Gather information
2. Evaluate subjective reports
3. Determine if signs/symptoms represent a syndrome
4. Correlation among signs/symptoms
5. Make a prognosis
6. Use patients history to determine handicap or disability
7. Estimate effects of therapy; based on clinical expectations, patient themselves, and research
Term
Ax
•Where to get the information
Definition
o Medical chart
o Family
o Patient
o Nursing
o Other disciplines/professions
Term
Does diagnosis drive therapy or does patient behavior and signs/symptoms drive therapy
Definition
patient behavior and signs/symptoms
Term
How important is it to label or classify the type of disorder
Definition
not very important; quality of life and what most important to family and patient
Term
The referral- why the MD wants the patient seen
Definition
-demographic information: age, vocation etc.
-services requested: what does MD want? just evaluat? do therapy?
Term
Patient interview
Definition
-rule of thumb- know the answer to the questions
-find a quiet place (attention)
-explain what about to do and show respect and empathy
Term
Behaviors seen with brain injury (not just CVA)
Definition
-altered responsiveness, delayed reaction time, attention, memory, perseveration, difficulty with abstract thought, personality changes
-emotional lability aka pseudobulbar effect
Term
emotional lability aka pseudobulbar affect
Definition
secondary to bilateral damage to midbrain/above pons
loss of cortical inhibition
can manifest itself as laughter, crying, smiling
all secondary to pathological reason though
may also be related to dementia, psyche issue, ALS degeneration, MS
Term
Standardized test
Definition
oPros:
-thorough, able to compare, label, identify, where to go from here
oCons:
-take a long time to administer, insurance company not always reimburse for all
Term
Nonstandardized tests
Definition
oPros:
-faster, fit for patient (individually tailored), saves time
oCons:
-not standardized so cannot compare to others, no score
Term
Why test
Definition
o diagnose a patient
o develop prognosis
o determine nature/severity of impairment
o apply to therapy
o establish baseline
o determine efficacy
Term
Left Neglect
Definition
failure to perceive sensory information from contralateral side of the body
typically see in patients with right hemisphere damage
diff dx with deficit specific to visual field
-failure to respond to people, sound, objects move or attend to left side of the body
-attend only to right side of self care activities
-displace writing to right side of the page
Term
Boston Naming Test
Definition
naming vocabulary test
Records:
-correct response
-latency in seconds
-stimulus cue (e.g. “a piece of furniture)
-phonemic cue (e.g. give part of word-sound-“h”ouse)
-error code (classify the errors)
-multiple choice ( go back through ones got wrong and give multiple choice)
-age range (5.0-79)
Term
MIRBI
oMini Inventory of Right Brain Injury
Definition
o 4 big tests: vision, language, emotion, behavior
olooking for -damage/extent of damage in right hemisphere
-identification
-severity
-strengths and weaknesses
-specific areas of dysfunction
ospecific deficits:
-visual scanning
-integrity of gnosis
-integrity of body image
-visuoverbal
-general behavior
-integrity of praxis
-higher level language skills
-affect
-psychic integrity etc.
Term
RIPA-G
oRoss Information Processing Assessment- Geriatric
Definition
oquantifies and describes: cognitive-linguistic deficits in individual over age 65 who experience confusion, disorientation, or altered level of awareness
oSome of the core subtests:
-immediate memory
-recent memory
-temporal orientation
-spatial orientation
-orientation to environment
-recall of general information
-problem solving and abstract reasoning
-organization of information
-auditory processing and comprehension
-problem solving and concrete reasoning
Term
WAB-R
oWestern Aphasia Battery-Revised
Definition
1. Spontaneous Speech-Content
2. Spontaneous Speech-Fluency
3. Auditory Verbal Comprehension- Y/N
4. Sequential Commands
5. Repetition
6. Object Naming
7. Reading
8. Writing
9. Apraxia (optional)
oafter score, gives guidelines for determining types (Global, Brocas, Isolation, Transcortical Motor, Werncke’s, Transcortical Sensory, Conduction, Anomic)
ofor adults or teenage children
Term
BDAE-3rd Edition
oBoston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination
Definition
- fluency
- conversation/expository speech
- auditory comprehension
- articulation
- recitation and music
- repetition
- naming
- paraphasia
- reading
- writing
Term
ABCD
oArizona Battery for Communication Disorders of Dementia
Definition
oage range 20-76 years old
osome subtests:
-mental status
-story retelling-immediate
-following commands
-comparative questions
-word learning-free recall, total recall, recognition
-repetition
-object description
-reading comprehension-word, sentence
-generative naming
-confrontative naming
-concept definition
-general drawing
-figure copying
-story retelling-delayed
Term
Who’s part of the treatment team for Aphasia
Definition
neurologist, physiatrist (rehab medicine physicians), OT, PT, ST, RT (respiratory or recreation therapist)psychiatry, dietary, social worker
Term
Who to treat? Here are some guidelines to this
Definition
oAmount and location of brain damage- severe damage in communication area means poor prognosis
okeep in mind acute phase vs. what the brain may look like post-acute
oweak/depressed/unmotivated
owhat’s the support system like
omay decide to do trial therapy to see if appropriate
Term
What 3 things go towards Cortical Reorganization? (dictate how brain organize)
Definition
1. Behavioral manipulation (e.g. tell kid “Don’t do that” over and over again)
2. Alterations to sensory input (e.g. artic therapy; visual input- show how to produce a sound, tactile input- feel where put tongue)
3. Cortical Injury
Term
Normal Sequelae of Stroke
Definition
oResults of CVA due to loss of O2/glucose
-if long enough, cell death occurs
-immediate effects
Term
Secondary efffects of CVA
1. Transneural degeneration
Definition
areas receiving input or projecting to the infracted area degenerate due to loss of connections (similar to muscle atrophy)
Term
Secondary efffects of CVA
2. Denervation supersensitivity
Definition
neurons that lose input from affected area become increasingly sensitive to any residual input being received from that area (e.g. movie theater- eyes become overly sensitive to small amounts of light, then walk out and get overloaded)
Term
Secondary efffects of CVA
3. Diaschisis
Definition
a sudden loss of function in a portion of the brain that is at a distance from the site of injury, but is connected to it by neurons
Term
Secondary efffects of CVA
4. Collateral sprouting
Definition
axons from nearby neurons establish new axonal contacts on the neurons that have lost their connections
Term
Secondary efffects of CVA
Definition
Transneural degeneration
Denervation supersensitivity
Diaschisis
Collateral sprouting
Term
Cortical Sequelae
Definition
oregeneration of lost neurons and their efferent and afferent connections does not occur
oRehab goal: focus on effects of behavioral and environmental influences on brain post-injury; we can’t do anything about how much damage there is or the secondary neuronal changes that occur
Term
Neural Substrates and Neural Plasticity
Definition
Yes you can teach an old dog new tricks but the old dog has to want to learn voluntarily
-example with the mice: let a mouse run caused increased space on motor cortex; make a mouse run caused no increase
Term
Changes in the nervous system
Definition
o An enriched visual environment means more dendrite branching in visual cortex
o highly associated with task-specific demands; not going to see broad cortical increases with one activity
o see increases in dendritic branching in same area on cortex opposite injury; helping out the other side
Term
Aphasia treatment is efficacious if conditions are met
Definition
treatment delivered by qualified professionals
patients with irreversible aphasia are excluded
content, intensity, duration and timing of treatment are appropriate for those receiving therapy
sensitive and reliable measures are used to track changes in performance
**emphasis should shift from efficacy (treatment yields change in test) to effectiveness (treatment yields change in meaningful changes in real life)
Term
Timing of intervention
Definition
o shorter amount of weeks, intense, early
8.8 hours/week for ~11 weeks recommended vs. 2 hours/week for 22 weeks
Term
The Localizationists
believed in localization of function
Definition
-Franz Gail early 1800s proposed Phrenology Faculties- bravery, love etc.
-Localizationists led to Broca and Wernicke (late 1800s)
Broca: ‘loss of articulate speech’
Wernicke: sensory aphasia caused by lesion in posterior temporal lobe
Term
Antilocalizationists
Definition
e.g. Hughlings Jackson – said brain worked together
Term
How many homunculi do you have in your head
Definition
4; your left and right motor and sensory
Term
Visual field blindness
Definition
lesion in optic nerve, optic tract, or visual cortex
Term
Homonymous hemianopsia
Definition
partial blindness in the same visual field resulting from a lesion on optic tract or pathway to occipital lobe (including visual cortex)
Term
Right retina picks up the ____ visual field
Definition
Left
•Left field- right of each retina- right hemisphere
Term
Left retina picks up the ____ visual field
Definition
Right
•Right field- left of each retina- left hemisphere
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