Characteristics of Non Fluent aphasia

aroobadev 1,574 views 22 slides Oct 25, 2016
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About This Presentation

All Charateristics of Non FLuent Aphasia
Difficulty communicating orally
Difficulty with written words
Other names:
Motor aphasia
Anterior aphasia
Broca's aphasia

Types of Non-Fluent Aphasia
Broca’s Aphasia
Transcortical motor Aphasia
Mixed Transcortical Aphasia
Global Apha...


Slide Content

Characteristics of Non-
Fluent Aphasias
Presented By:
AroobaAsmatDev
BSSLP 02143004

Non-Fluent Aphasia
•Difficulty communicating orally
•Difficulty with written words
Other names:
•Motor aphasia
•Anterior aphasia
•Broca'saphasia

Types of Non-Fluent Aphasia
•Broca’sAphasia
•Transcorticalmotor Aphasia
•Mixed TranscorticalAphasia
•Global Aphasia

Broca’sAphasia
Speech Poor, Effortful , Paraphasias
Fluency Impaired
Auditory ComprehensionPreserved
Visual Comprehension Preserved
Prosody Impaired
Physical Impairment Hemiparesis , apraxia of hand and mouth
Naming Impaired
Repetition Impaired, hesitant
Psychological Ability Mute, Grumpy,Frustrated, depressed

Broca’sAphasia cont..
Reading Impaired
Writing Impaired
Linguistic impairment Agrammatism
Conversational Language Non-Fluent
Pointing Relatively Abnormal
Visual Field Normal
Broadman’sArea 44, 45

CT scan of Broca’sPatient

Difference
Between
Broca’sand
Wernike’s

TranscorticalMotor Aphasia
Speech Poor,Echolalia, Preservation
Fluency Impaired
Auditory ComprehensionPreserved
Visual Comprehension Preserved
Prosody Impaired
Physical Impairment Hemiparesis , Grasp Reflex
Naming Impaired
Repetition Preserved
Psychological Ability Cooperative

TranscorticalMotor Aphasia cont..
Reading Impaired
Writing Impaired
Linguistic impairment Pragmatic function
Conversational Language Sparse, echolalic
Pointing Normal
Visual Field Normal
Broadman’sArea 6, 8, 9, 20,

Mixed TranscorticalAphasia
Speech Mutism
Fluency Impaired
Auditory ComprehensionImpaired
Visual Comprehension Impaired
Prosody Impaired
Physical Impairment Present
Naming Impaired
Repetition Preserved
Psychological Ability Hemianopia,Visual agnosia, Hemiparesis

Mixed TranscorticalAphasia cont..
Reading Impaired
Writing Impaired
Linguistic impairment Pragmatic and semantic
Conversational Language NonFluent, echolalic
Pointing Impaired
Visual Field Normal to defective
Broadman’sArea

CT scan of Mixed TranscorticalAphasia

Global Aphasia
Speech Impaired
Fluency Impaired
Auditory ComprehensionImpaired
Visual Comprehension Impaired
Prosody Impaired
Physical Impairment Present
Naming Impaired
Repetition Impaired
Psychological Ability Impaired

Global Aphasia
Reading Impaired
Writing Impaired
Linguistic impairment Impaired
Conversational Language Impaired
Pointing Impaired
Visual Field Impaired
Broadman’sArea Impaired

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