Term
|
Definition
- spatially distributed - "Gesault" - getting hte whole
- F0 processing; music & melody
- spatial temporal processing --> getting the full image
- deficits here are non-linear, spatially distributed arrays
- contemporary - collaboration of hemispheres; work together to achieve goals (produce & regulate behavior)
|
|
|
Term
What are 6 sterotypic characteristics of RHD? |
|
Definition
- egocentric
- social convetions - pragmatically incorrect
- unaware of limitations - extremely impulsive
- tangential/rambling of speech - not organized - talk a lot/say a lot w/ little or new info/content
- no abstract/implied meaning - cannot reason or infer
- cannot grasp significance of complex events
|
|
|
Term
What drives RHD behviors? |
|
Definition
insensitive to implied meaning - don't use contextual cues - they may go to a funeral and tell a joke |
|
|
Term
What are the 2 perceptual abnormalitites (striking difference) due to: |
|
Definition
- disturbed or incomplete mental representaion of external visuospatial relationships
- cab't analyze information & integrate to whole - seeng parts, no composite
- impaired attention - hard to keep on taks (highly distractable)
**perceptual deficits will be 1 or combination of both** |
|
|
Term
What are the 7 perceptecual impairments? |
|
Definition
- neglect
- denial of illness
- constructional impairment
- topographical impairment
- geographic disorientation
- visuoperceptual impairments
- facial recognition deficits
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual impairment:
1) hemispatial neglect |
|
Definition
- hemispatial neglect - failure to respond to stimuli of 1 side opposite side of brain injury
- common/severe in RIGHT PARIETAL INJURY (supramarginal & angular gyrus)
- may co-occur with partial or complete visual field blidness
- if it does not resolve/improve in days/weeks must address in Treatment (Tx)
|
|
|
Term
symptoms of hemispatial neglect (left)
**never their fault, always someone else's/something else's fault** |
|
Definition
- failure to respond to people, sound, objects, etc. - left of midline
- attend to only right side in grooming/self-care
- bump into walls on left side
- read only right side of printed materias
- displace writing to right side
- diminished awareness of language - simliar to Wernicke's - does not manage output
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments
What are the 4 proposed theories on neglect? |
|
Definition
- representational theories - neglect caused by disturbed mental representation of external space (udnerlying perceptual deficit)
- arousal theories - perceptual systems are less responsive to stimuli
- attention engagement theories - difficulty directing attn. to neglected side
- attentional disengagement theories - not attending to stimuli
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments:
2) denial of illness - agnosogia
|
|
Definition
- common with right parietal injury
- ranges in difficulty:
- acknowledges, but indifferent
- underestimate effects & severity
- disavows existence of disability
- denies ownership of limbs
- claims to perform activites beyond abilites
- may ignore errors, confabulate, argue, & justify when confronted
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments:
3) Constructional Impairments
|
|
Definition
- visuospatial, perceptual, organization impairements
- **parietal-occipital dmaage**
- responds quickly or impulsively
- proportions are inaccurate - lines are distorted - problems w/ drawing/reproducting
|
|
|
Term
Percetpual Impairments:
3) Constructional Impairments - Frequency of Errors |
|
Definition
- leave details out on left side
- add lines, rotate, and fragment drawings when copying
- 3D becomes a 2D drawing
- displaced to right side, disorganized & crowded (clock drawing)
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments:
4) Topographic Impairment |
|
Definition
- distorted internal representaitons of external space - don't see/understand external space
- difficulty orientating to extra-personal space
- following familiar routes - lost easily
- reading maps
- giving directions
- failure to attend to visual cues
- fail to recognize landmarks or learn new ones
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments:
5) Geographic Disorientation - less common than topographic, but can co-occur |
|
Definition
- disoriented to:
- where they are - confused
- familar people
- location
- *distinct to time and place*
- recognize general nature of surroundings, but mistaken as to locality
- distinct from oritentation to time & speech
- due to difficulty inferring location from cues surrounding
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments:
6) Visuosperceptual Impairments
|
|
Definition
- difficulty identifying objects, picutres, or drawings in unusual formats - because of orientation/relationship is different
- formats: incomplete, degraded/distorted
- superimposed line drawings of objects
- fragmetned object forms in unusual orientation and/or size
- can describe, but cannot identify
- poor organization of information into coherent rep. of stimulus
|
|
|
Term
Perceptual Impairments:
7) facial recognition deficits - prosopagnosia |
|
Definition
- failure to recognize familiar people by facial features
- may affect perception of cartoons, line-drawn faces & photographs
- posterior RHD - if persistent may be bilateral
|
|
|
Term
Recognition & expression of Emotion are attributed to: (3) |
|
Definition
- appreciation of prosodic cues - don't appreciate inflection
- facial expression & interpreting
- emotinal tones related to sterotypical emotional situations - don't appreciate affects (laugh @ funerals)
**don't convey their own emotion (vocal or facial)** |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- focusing, maintaining, and shifting attention = difficult
- impairments have varied effects:
- highly distractable in Tx activities
- intereferes w/ ADLs - grooming, cooking, et. - get caught up in irrelevant details
- difficult to determine overall meaning of situations/events
|
|
|
Term
Effects of Attentional Impairments |
|
Definition
- difficult to spearate relevant vs. irrelevant
- inability to maintain app. interaction patterns with conversational partners - important - difficulty carrying on a conversation; can't shift quickly
- decreased maintence of coherence in speech & writing - lack of organization & sequencing
|
|
|
Term
Attentional impairements are reflected in processes (7) |
|
Definition
- arousal
- vigilance
- orientation
- sustained attentinon
- selective attention
- alternating attention
- divided attention
|
|
|
Term
What are the 4 communicative impairments? |
|
Definition
- diminished speech prosody
- anomalous content & organization connected speech
- impaired comprehension of narratives & conversations
- pragmatic impairments
|
|
|
Term
Communicative Impairment:
1) Diminished speech prosody - robot like |
|
Definition
- reduced stress in phrases & sentennces
- influction is restricted - diminished pitch
- slower rate
- failure to distinguish between questions & assertions
|
|
|
Term
Communicative Impairments:
2) Anamoalous content & organization of connected speech |
|
Definition
- confabulated & sometimes inappropriate speech (repetitive, irrelevant, tangential, disgressive)
- use more words, but produce less info - lacks content in terms of information
- apparent in narrative production - cookie theft picture
|
|
|
Term
Communicative Impairments:
3) impaired comprehension of narratives & conversations |
|
Definition
- no cause/effect
- premature assumptions, cannot reject/revise - impulsive
- fails to judge appropriateness of event
- does not appreciate implied meaning
- performance depends upon context
|
|
|
Term
Theories of impaired comprehension of narratives & conversations |
|
Definition
- Suppression deficit hypothesis - cannot suppress initially activated assumptions or inferences
- Theory of Mind -inability to appreciate content of other people's minds
|
|
|
Term
Communicative Impairment:
4) Pragmatic Impairments - common ** work on** |
|
Definition
- literal interpretation
- will not establish relationship of events
- difficulty interpreting emotional/body posture
- affect social & itneractional aspects of language
- turntaking, topic maintentance, social conventions (Saying hello), eye contact, repairs
- shift topic --<perservate on previous topic
|
|
|
Term
How do you assess RHD (4)? |
|
Definition
- Standardize Procedures
- Non-standardized procedures
- pragmatic assessments
- visual & spatial perception, organization, & attention
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ RHD:
Standardized Procedures |
|
Definition
- RH Lang Battery
- mini inventory of RBI - clock drawing - can be used to identify RHD; strengths/weakness; guide treatment & document progress ** BEST SCREENING TEST **
- RICE-R - rating scale; 4 tests of visual scanning & tracking; metaphoric language test
- BICC - assessing cognition comm. dysfunction in RHD adults
- Evanston Northwestern Healthcare - RH screen - only screen selected items (long test)
|
|
|
Term
Assessing adults with RHD:
Non-Standardized Procedures |
|
Definition
- Gordon & associates protocol - visual scanning & attention; ADLs skills; sensorimotor integration; visual integration; higher cog & percept functions; linguistic & cognitive flexibility, affective state
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults with RHD:
Pragmatic Assessments |
|
Definition
- rating scales
- RHLB - supportive routines; assertive routines; formality - lang & behavior; turn-taking - rules of conv
- RICE-R (rating scale)L nonverbal comm; conversational skills, use of ling. context; referencing skills
- Test of pragmatic abilities - not designed exclusively for RHD
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults with RHD:
visual & spatial perception, attention, & organization |
|
Definition
- cancellation tasks
- line bisection tests - mark the middle of the line
- copying & drawing tests
- drawing from memory test - clock
- scanning test
- identify incomplete/fragmented visual stimuli
- figure-ground discrimination - airplane w/ lines or bike behind fence
|
|
|
Term
Treating Adults w/ RHD - they have more diffuse comm. impairments that are less amenable to quantification (when compared to LHD)
Cognitive Behavioral Abnormalities (treatment) 4 target areas |
|
Definition
- indifference & denial
- attention impairments and distractabilities
- impulsivity
- impaired reasoning and problem solving
|
|
|
Term
Cognitive Behavioral Abnormalities:
1) Indifference & denial
|
|
Definition
usually diminish with neurologic recover; look at prior & current interest |
|
|
Term
Cognitive Behavioral Abnormalities
2) attention impairments & distractabilities
|
|
Definition
- paper & pencil tasks (concrete-no denying errors)
- targets:
- sustained attention, selective attention, alternating attention or divided attention
- must add variations and make more applicable to daily living situations
|
|
|
Term
Cognitive Behavioral Abnormalities
3) impulsivity
|
|
Definition
- stop and go signals (external) progressively treated/shaped to patient - generated self-cues
- reasoning & problem solving
- give possible solutions (2) & reasons why not correct
|
|
|
Term
Cognitive Behavioral Abnormalities
4) impaired resoning & problem solving
|
|
Definition
- role play problem solving - must rehearse alternatives to making decisions & acting
- they do not recognize own erros but quick to point out others
- mimic behvior to help point out/identify their errors
|
|
|
Term
Treatment: Communicative Impairments (4)
|
|
Definition
- affective communication & prosody
- reading impairments
- pragmatic impairments
- inferencing failures
|
|
|
Term
Treatment: Communicative Impairments
1) affective communication & prosody
|
|
Definition
- need to discriminate/recognize emotion
- imitate --> produce
- on command
- need to watch video tapes; see people itneracting, what are the people talking about? - emotions - how would you know?
- patients don't understand facial expressions or body language
- **work on ability to comprehend & express**
|
|
|
Term
Treatment: Communicative Impairments
2) Reading impairments
|
|
Definition
- visual neglect - common target treatment - because neglect impacts reading & comprehend printed material
- treated w/ external cues to shift to the left side of printed materials
- heightens pt's awareness of left space or by activities that enhance gen. attn process
- games - life, candyland, bingo, dominos, checkers (atn, spatial process, reasoning), "I Spy"
- tray with fake food - What are you having for lunch today? - get them to shift their focus to other portions of plate
|
|
|
Term
Treatment: Communicative Impairments
3) Pragmatic Impairments
|
|
Definition
- preserved verbal skills -build upon
- Tx include coaching & structured practice with compensatory skills
- eye contact, turn-taking, and topic maintenance
- "where should your eyes be?"
|
|
|
Term
Treatment: Communicative Impairments:
4) inference failure - impairment making inferences
|
|
Definition
- Tx should focus on making inferences
- appropriate acitivites:
- appreciate humor - punchline
- app. implied meaning, metaphors, idioms
- verbal and picturoal absurdities- not much time spent on
- **compr. of implied information in discourse
- **retelling stories (seq. & org) prefer writing **
- **perceiving relationships**
|
|
|
Term
Treatment: Resource Allocation RHD |
|
Definition
**limitaitons/abnormalities are due to limitations in the availability of resources required to carry out mental processes** |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- tend ot no spontaneously generalize responses or strategies from 1 context ot another
- progress through sucessive levels of Tx may be slowed because of failure to apply skills
|
|
|
Term
Generalization across Tx tasks |
|
Definition
- can be enhanced by making task source resemble the target task
- loose-traning - prevents Pt from beomcing too tightly bound to a restricted set of conditions - allows for variations
**use a wide range of reinforcement**
|
|
|
Term
Generalization from Clinic to out-side environment |
|
Definition
- need to practice mroe than a couple of times; need to exhibit appropriate behaviors over 3 consecutive sessions
- incorparte aspects of target evironment to Tx activities
- train self-instruction & verbal mediation
- invlove family members, caregivers, friends, etc. in Tx
|
|
|
Term
Overall Critical Wants/Needs of RHD |
|
Definition
- look left
- create pattern behavios; make associations (allows for generalizations)
- always try to take to a natural context
- diminish exact conditions (generalize)
- self-talk, think through - self-correct, work through: "what is the first thing I do?"
- always give HW related to Tx goals - make sure they can do it in therapy before sending it home
- orientaiton problems: calendar (mark days off) guest registry
|
|
|
Term
What are some risk factors for TBIs? |
|
Definition
- substance abuse
- school adjustment (poor) & social history (rebels)
- low SES
- personality types - impulsive
- history of TBIs (3x greater)
- high risk
|
|
|
Term
What are the 2 types of TBIs? |
|
Definition
- Pepetrating
- non-penetrating
|
|
|
Term
Types of TBIs
Penetrating Injuries |
|
Definition
- missles & blunt instruments (club); high velocity (90% fatal) low velocity (40%) fatal
- skull is perforated & meninges are usually torn
- **foreign matter w/ missle affects nervous system**
- brainstem penetrating - significant problems if the pt lives - typically fatal or paralysis (loss of function)
- those who survive = focal physical and cognitive and linguistic deficits reflecting site of injury
|
|
|
Term
TBI types:
2) Non pepenetrating - what are the types (3) |
|
Definition
meninges intact, no forgein substance in the brain
- non-acceleration
- acceleration injuries
- traumatic injuries
|
|
|
Term
TBI type: Non-penetrating:
non-acceleration - struck in the head with an object
3 types of non acceleration |
|
Definition
- impression trauma
- elliposidal deformation
- skull fracture
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: non-accelerating:
Impression trauma |
|
Definition
small area (blunt force) pushed in - area of injury at point of impact; damage to meninges |
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: non-accelerating:
elliposidal deformation |
|
Definition
- skull forced from usual shape (oval) --> circular
- increase the volume, which leads to increased pressure & expands the structures
- causes tissu shearing (ripping, pullin, stretching), bleeding & swelling
- the swelling is what leads to death (secondary consequence to bleeding)
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: non-accelerating:
skull fracture |
|
Definition
- crack, not complete break (at base of skull) - damage to cranial nerves or carotid arteries
- dangerous because if meninges are torn because of bleeding of vessel, it could lead to potential infection by bacteria penetrating damaged meninges
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries:
What is it? What are the types of acceleration injuries? |
|
Definition
- move quickly and suddenly stop - the sudden acceleration or deceleration of head (whiplash)
- brain & brainstem suffer diffused damage caused by movement in the skull due to intertial forces
- linear acceleration
- angular acceleration
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries:
linear acceleration
|
|
Definition
- head suddenly accelerated by outside force - moving along a linear path aligned with central axis of head
- bruises/abrasions on brain surface
- mismatch in deceleration compresses brain against inner surface of skull opposite point of initial impact
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries:
linear acceleration
coup, contre coup, inertial lag, translational trauma
|
|
Definition
- inertial lag - of the brain causes it to be compressed against skull at point of impact
- coup injuries - damage at point of impact
- contre coup - localized damage in another area -- more diffused damage
- translational trauma - focal damage to meninges, brain, cortex, and underlying subcortical tissue ** front or back of the head**
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries:
2) angular acceleration
|
|
Definition
- blunt force applied at an angle causing the skull and its contents to rotate away from the point of impact
- lag of intertia of skull mvm, generating twisting & shearing forces
- wertebrae & neck muscles stop mvmt, causing rebound in opposite direct
- **tissue damages = more midline structures**
- produce more sever brain injuries than linear
- the brain's inertia causes it to continue to rotate its original direction for a few milisec & causes second episode of twisting & shearing forces in axial structures
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating:
acceleration injuries
(4) |
|
Definition
- cranial nerve damage
- diffuse axonal injury (attention, perception, behavioral problems w/ TBI)
- vegetative state
- axonal degeneration
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries
Vegetative State |
|
Definition
- caused by widespread diffused axonal injury
- patient has sleep/wake cylce, but makes no purposeful movements
- results from severe, diffuse damage to cortical & subcortical regions with relative preservation of the brainstem
- **inertial force, rather than tearing of axons cause vegetative state**
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries
axonal degeneration
|
|
Definition
- 1-2 days post, the stretched axons swell, separate from cell bodies & then the dendrite
- affectts some axons in region while leaving others untouched
- deafferentaiton - spotty pattern of loss of input to a neuron from others
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: acceleration injuries
What happens - 2 things ?
|
|
Definition
- brain tries to recover, build new pathways to damaged areas = collateral sprouting or dendritic proliferation (send intact axon terminals into regions of deafferentation)
- repair process may partially account for physiologic recovery in patients w/ mild-moderate TBI
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: traumatic injuries
4 types
|
|
Definition
- cuts & bruises on the brain surface, twisting, and shearing within brain causes bleeding (hemorrhage) and accumlulation of blood (hematoma)
- epidural hematoma
- subdural hematoma
- subarachnoid hematoma
- intracranial hematoma
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: traumatic injuries
epidural hematoma
subdural hematoma
|
|
Definition
- epidural hematoma - blood accumulates between dura & skull
- subdural hematoma - accumulation of blood between dura & arachnoid
- MVAs most common cause: lacerations of cortical blood vessels by abrasions & contusions on brain
|
|
|
Term
TBI: non-penetrating: traumatic injuries
subarachnoid hematoma
intracerebral hematoma
**can die quickly with these 2**
|
|
Definition
- subarachnoid hematoma - in a non-vascular area - blood vessels from pia rupture
- intracerebral hematoma - rupture of blood vessels within the brain
- usually occur/develop in subcortical white matter, B.G., & brainstem
|
|
|
Term
What are some secondary consequences of TBI? - represents the brain's response to trauma (more devestating)
6 types |
|
Definition
- cerebral edema
- traumatic hyrocephalus
- elevated intracranial pressure
- ischemic brain damage
- cerebral vasopasm
- alterations in blood-brain-barrier
|
|
|
Term
Secondary Consequences of TBI:
cerebral edema
traumatic hyrocephalus |
|
Definition
- cerebral edema- accumluation of fluid due to trauma --> causes tissue to swell
- increased intracranial pressure - occurs around the primary site of injury
- traumatic hyrocephalus - tissue compresses passage of CSF (swelling) - ventricles & subarachnoid
- accumulate CSD -->enlargement of ventricles --> takes up more space
|
|
|
Term
Secondary Consequences of TBI:
elevated intracranial pressure
ischemic brain damage
cerebral vasopasm |
|
Definition
- elevated intracranial pressure - most frequent cause of TBI death; build up of pressure w/in cranial vault
- elevated pressure compresses & displaces tissue
- reults in herniation
- prolonged intracranial pressure --> irreversible brain damage, coma, & death
- ischemic brain damage - insufficent O2 to brain tissues
- cerebral vasopasm - walls around blood vessels have contractions & spasm; corical arteries from subarachnoid hemorrhage are affected most frequently
|
|
|
Term
Secondary Consequences of TBI:
alternations in blood-brain barrier |
|
Definition
- protective barrier - keeps foreign matter out - allow substances to normally exclude from blood to brain, into the brain (now)
- causes cerebral edema (swelling)
**primary & secondary phsyical consequences of TBI are important determinants of eventual level of recall**
|
|
|
Term
What are the 4 prognostic indicators?
|
|
Definition
- duration of coma
- duration of post-traumatic amnesia
- patient related variables
- behavior & cognitive recover
|
|
|
Term
Prognostic Indicator:
1) duration of coma
2) duration of post-traumatic amnesia |
|
Definition
- duration of coma - deeper & longer lasting comas associated with poor recovery
- Glasgow - simple & quick - used most often; used immediately post injury; rating eye opening, verbal responses, and motor responses
- Com. Level Conciousness Scale - broader range of responses & is more sensitive than Glasgow
- duration of Post traumatic amnesia -time post coma during which pt is unable to store new information & experiences in memor
- GOAT; Rancho Los Amigos Scale of Cog. Levels; Disability Rating Scale
|
|
|
Term
Prognostic Indicator:
Patient related variables
behavioral and cognitive recover |
|
Definition
- patient related variables:
- age - younger, the better recovery - system can regenerate (heal quicker)
- substance abuse (prior) - negative effect; longer coma & hospitalization
- premorbid intelligence - release of inhibition - persisting changes of personality
- SES
- behavioral & cognitive recovery
- step wise fashion; little to no "rapid" mvmt
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults with TBIs (5) |
|
Definition
- level of consciousness & responsiveness to stimulation
- orientation
- cognitive & comm. abilities
- tonic alertness & phasic alertness
- attention: sustained, selective, alternating, divided
- memory: pre-traumatic & post-traumatic
- visual processing
- executive function
- language & communication
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ TBIs
- level of consciousness & responsiveness to stimulation
|
|
Definition
- alertness & responses to stimuli
- Glasgow - general estimate
- sleep/wake cycles & ease of arousal from sleep
- responses to environmental stimuli (tv/radio)
- responsiveness to speech & commands
- visual & tactile stimulation
- response to olfactory & taste stimul
- **use scales & augment ratings w/ observations
- **frequency & nature of responses to stimuli (multimodality)
- **TBIs are most responsive in the mornings
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ TBIs
2. orientation |
|
Definition
- person, place, time
- awareness of self & appreciation of how one is related to others and environment
- place - immediate environment - where are you now? city, state, country, etc.
- time - "how long do you think I have been here?"
- screenings - mini mental or GOAT
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ TBIs
3. cognitive & communication abilities
Alertness & Attention
|
|
Definition
- Alertness:
- tonic - ongoing/continuing receptively to stimulation
- phasic- momentary rapidly occurring changes in receptivity to stimulation
- Attention - UNIVERSAL CONSQUENCE OF TBI
- sustained - over time maintaining
- selective - maintain attn/focus on stiulus despite competing or distracting stimuli
- alternating - shifting to stimuli according to changes in task requirements
- divided - performing more than 1 activity concurrently (multitasking)
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ TBIs
3. cognitive & communication abilities
Memory
**impairment in retrospective memory - persistent area of loss - especially declarative (world knowledge) more impaired than procedural** |
|
Definition
- Memory
- pre-traumatic - hard to gage what they remember vs. what they have been told
- loss of memory for events preceding injury
- before traumatic event - not encoded to LTM
- loss usually shrinks w/ recovery of all but lost few seconds to minutes
- post-traumatic - loss for memory/events immediately following injury
- inability to retain new info min --> wks after injury
- lasts longer & has more lasting effects ADLs
- duration related to coma duration & helps predict recovery
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ TBIs
3. cognitive & communication abilities
Visual processing - simialar to RHD
|
|
Definition
- similar to RHD
- posterior damage will have persisting deficits
- will perform poorly on:
- identifying incomplete, partially, fragmeted stimuli - analyzing spatial relationships
- discrimination of figures from backgrounds in drawings or photos
|
|
|
Term
Assessing Adults w/ TBIs
3. cognitive & communication abilities
Executive function
- **when there are poor results look @ memory, att, visuospatial processing deficits - are they underlying the impact??**
|
|
Definition
- Executive function - not impt for those below level IV - must work on attn & orientation (reduct confusion & agitation
- abstract thinking, reasoning, & problem solving
- Language & Communicaiton - depends upon severity & pattern
- look @ language output & auditory comp/receptive vocab
- reading vocab & comp
- generative naming
- connected & conversational speech sample (pragmatics) carrying on a convo - content, orga, coherence, pragmatics, topic maintences & shifts
|
|
|
Term
Intervention of TBIs (4 steps/processes) |
|
Definition
- functionally oriented approach
- behavioral management
- pharmacological management
- cognitive communication rehabilitation
|
|
|
Term
Intervention of TBIs (4 steps/processes)
Functionally oriented approach
|
|
Definition
- improving/being able to carry out ADLs
- planning/organizing
- teach to budget, shop, what is a good option/could be better?
- Sensory stimulation
- Orientation training
|
|
|
Term
Intervention of TBIs (4 steps/processes)
Functionally oriented approach
sensory stimulation
orientation training
|
|
Definition
- sensory stimulation - coma stimulation
- responses to differential stimuli, what to build consistency
- facilitate alertness/arousal; increase responsiveness to environment, prevent sensory deprivation, facilitate responsiveness changes --> all 5 senses
- orientation training - use to anticipate upcoming events
- passive orientation drills - lower level - asking them to repeat, verbalize cues give, taught to tell time & where they are
- active orientation drills - carry out ADLs to person, place & time - more indept - follow schedule (appts, meals, monitor passage of time)
- depends upon internalized concepts of person place and time
|
|
|
Term
Intervention of TBIs (4 steps/processes)
Functionally oriented approach
environmental control
|
|
Definition
- environment control - increase coping skills, want to reduct agitation & confusing situations
- label possessions/locationgs
- photographs of bathroom
|
|
|
Term
Intervention of TBIs (4 steps/processes)
Behavioral Management - consistently delivered - enhanced desired behaviors by manipulating stimuli & response contingencies
4 types of reinforcement |
|
Definition
- positive reinforcement - pleasurable stimuli contingent upon desired response - consequence
- negative reinforcement - terminate activity - aversive stimuli removed contigent on desired response
- punishment - limited role - aversive stimuli delivered contingent on undesired respones
- extincting - no reinforcement - selected respones elicit neither pleasurable nor aversive stimuli
**verbal praises does not mean much in early stages - want something tangible**
|
|
|
Term
Intervention of TBIs (4 steps/processes)
3) pharmacological management
|
|
Definition
- medication can be prescribed to:
- control agitation & restlesness
- improve alertness & attn - stimulants
- manage depression (later stages)
- fiminish psychotic symptoms - reduce paranoia, hallucinations & dillusional behaviors
**must have proper dosage & combination - look at schedule**
|
|
|