Term
Aphasia is the result of this. |
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Definition
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Term
Severity of aphasia is based on these things. |
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Definition
cause of disorder, location and extent of brain injury, age of the injury, and general health of client. |
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Term
Aphasia can affect these modalities. |
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Definition
Listening, speaking, reading, writing, and/or related language functions (e.g., arithmetic, gesturing, telling time, counting money, interpreting environmental noises |
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Term
Aphasia affect how many people in the U.S.? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the deficits and characteristics of aphasia? |
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Definition
reduced vocabulary, omission or addition of words, stereotypic speech, delayed or reduced output of speech, hyperfluent speech, language comprehension deficit. |
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Term
Physical deficits that accompany aphasia. |
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Definition
hemiparesis, hemiplegia, hemisensory impairment, hemianopsia, dysphagia, epilepsy, tonic-clonic (unconsciousness); petit mal/psychomotor (loss of motor control but conscious) |
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Term
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Definition
weakness on one side of the body |
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Term
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Definition
Blindness in right visual field of each eye |
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Term
Expressive language deficits that accompany aphasia |
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Definition
Agnosis, Agrammatism, Agraphia, Alexia, Anomia, Jargon, Neologism, Paraphasia, Verbal Stereotype |
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Term
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Definition
sensory deficit accompanying some aphasias that make it difficult for the client to understand sensory information; may be specific to auditory or visual information |
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Term
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Definition
Omission of grammatical elements such as articles and prepositions, morphological endings (-ing, -es) |
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Term
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Definition
meaningless or irrelevant speech with typical intonational patterns. Often long and syntactically correct although containing nonsense. |
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Term
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Definition
A new or novel word that does not exist in the client's language. |
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Term
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Definition
Word substitutions found in speech which is fluent and grammatic. |
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Term
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Definition
Writing is full of mistakes and poorly formed; unable to write what the are going to say; agrammatism, argon and neologisms may be present. |
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Term
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Definition
Difficulty naming entities; know what they want but can't find the word to name it. |
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Term
Define: Verbal Stereotype |
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Definition
An expression repeated over and over; may be an obscene word or neologism. |
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Term
Characteristics of fluent aphasia? |
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Definition
Typical rate, intonation, pauses, and stress patterns; suffers from word substitutions, neologisms, verbose |
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Term
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Definition
Wernickes' Aphasia, Anomic Aphasia, Conduction Aphasia, Transcortical Sensory Aphasia, Subcortical Aphasia |
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Term
What Type of fluent aphasia has the following characteristics: 1) fluent or hyperfluent speech, 2) poor auditory and visual comprehension, 3) verbal paraphasia or unintended words and neologisms, 4) sentences formed by strings of unrelated words, 5) mild to severe impairment naming and imitative speech |
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Definition
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Term
Characteristics of this fluent Aphasia: 1) Severe anomia in both speech and writing, 2) fluent spontaneous speech marred by word retrieval difficulties, 3) mild-moderate auditory comprehension problems |
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Definition
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Term
Characteristics of this fluent aphasia: 1) Anomia, 2) mild (if any) auditory comprehension impairment, 3) extremely poor repetitive or imitative speech, 4) paraphasia |
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Definition
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Term
Characteristics of this type of aphasia: 1) unimpaired ability to repeat or imitate words, 2) verbal paraphasia or word substitutions, 3) lack of nouns and severe anomia, 4) poor auditory comprehension |
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Definition
Transcortical Sensory Aphasia |
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Term
Characteristics of this fluent aphasia: 1) fluent expressive, 2) paraphasia and neologisms, 3) repetition unaffected, 4) auditory and reading comprehension relatively unaffected |
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Definition
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Term
These are the characteristics of a nonfluent aphasia. |
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Definition
Slow labored speech; struggle to retrieve words and form sentences; site of lesion in/near the frontal lobe |
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Term
What are the three nonfluent aphasias? |
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Definition
1) Broca's Aphasia, 2) Transcortical Motor Aphasia, 3) Global or Mixed Aphasia |
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Term
Characteristics of this nonfluent aphasia:1) short sentences with agrammatism, anomia, problems with imitation of speech, slow labored speech and writing, 5) articulation and phonological errors |
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Definition
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Term
Characteristics of this nonfluent aphasia: 1) impaired speech, 2) good verbal imitative skills, 3) mildly impaired visual and auditory comprehension |
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Definition
Transcortical Motor Aphasia |
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Term
Characteristics of this type of nonfluent aphasia: profound language impairment in all modalities, 2) imitative speech and naming affected, 3) auditory and visual comprehension limited to single words or short phrases |
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Definition
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Term
Of the 1/2 million Americans that suffer a stroke each year, how many become aphasic? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the rapidly developing loss of brain function(s) due to disturbance in the blood supply to the brain. |
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Term
Describe: Ischemic Stroke |
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Definition
Complete or partial occlusion of the arteries |
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Term
Describe stroke by Cerebral arteriosclerosis |
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Definition
thickening of the cerebral arteries; elasticity lost; walls week; blood flow restricted |
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Term
Describe stoke by Embolism |
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Definition
obstruction to flow due to a traveling blood clot |
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Term
Describe stroke by thrombosis |
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Definition
plaque build up or blood clot formed at site; does not travel |
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Term
Describe stroke by hemorrhage. |
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Definition
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Term
Describe stroke by aneurysm |
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Definition
saclike bulge in weakened artery wall |
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Term
Describe stroke by Arteriovenous Malformation |
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Definition
poorly formed tangle of arteries and veins in brain; weak walls ma burst under pressure |
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Term
Risk factors associated with stroke? |
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Definition
smoking, alcohol use. poor diet, lack of exercise, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, obesity and history of strokes |
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Term
What is the most common type of stroke? |
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Definition
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Term
What are indicators that you have had a stroke? |
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Definition
loss of consciousness, headache, weak or immobile limbs, slurred speech |
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Term
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Definition
Transient Ischemis Attack, Ministrokes that may precede a major stroke |
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Term
Some Lifespan issues associated with a stroke? |
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Definition
hospitalization, 1/3 mortality rate, acute care , aphasia and neuromuscular deficits, perseveration, disinhibition, exaggerated mood swings, isolation & dependency |
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Term
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Definition
1) Medical history, 2) Interview client and fam, 3) oral peripheral exam, 3) hearing test, 4) speech and language observation and testing |
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Term
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Definition
1) All areas of language; 2) reading, writing, auditory comprehension, expressive language, gestures and nonlinguistic communication; across all 5 aspects of language; higher functioning, interpretation of client behavior |
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