aphasia
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- Johns Hopkins Medicine - Aphasia
- Cleveland Clinic - Aphasia
- Social Science LibreTexts - Aphasia
- NHS - Aphasia
- Patient - Aphasia
- WebMd - What is Aphasia?
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services - Aphasia
- American Speech-Language-Hearing Association - Aphasia
- Mayo Clinic - Aphasia
- Verywell Health - What is Aphasia?
- Healthline - Aphasia
- National Center of Biotechnology Information - Aphasia
- Also called:
- dysphasia
- Key People:
- Henri Bergson
- Paul Broca
- Carl Wernicke
- Related Topics:
- dysarthria
- dyslexia
- Broca aphasia
- Wernicke aphasia
- logorrhea
- On the Web:
- Patient - Aphasia (Apr. 01, 2024)
aphasia, defect in the expression and comprehension of language caused by damage to the temporal and the frontal lobes of the brain. Aphasia can be caused by a head injury, a tumour, a stroke, or an infection. Symptoms vary with the location and extent of the brain tissues involved.
Damage to the frontal lobe may result in Broca aphasia. Individuals with this form of aphasia are able to comprehend speech but have great difficulty expressing their thoughts. People with Broca aphasia speak in short phrases that include only nouns and verbs (telegraphic speech). Individuals with Wernicke aphasia, which may result from damage to the temporal lobe, speak in long, garbled sentences (word salad) and have poor speech comprehension. Global aphasia may result from extensive brain damage. Individuals with global aphasia exhibit symptoms of both Broca and Wernicke aphasia.
Speech therapy may be useful to treat aphasia. In some instances, improvement may be due to assumption of some language functions by other areas of the brain; recovery is usually incomplete, however.