
Demystifying Aphasia
Communication is a critical aspect of our lives. We use words to communicate our emotions, instructions, thoughts, and ideas. To do this, we use several parts of our bodies, including our brains, nerves, vocal cords, mouth, tongue, and jaw.
When any of these parts are affected, your ability to form, process, or say words may be affected. However, this is often more significant when your brain is affected, congenitally or through a brain injury. A congenital anomaly or brain injury can cause several speech disorders including aphasia.
Key Takeaways:
Aphasia is a language disorder that temporarily or permanently affects your ability to process or form words when certain parts of your brain are injured. Depending on the severity of aphasia, there may also be reading and writing difficulties.
Aphasia appears in different forms, depending on which parts of the brain are affected. The three most common types are: Broca’s Aphasia, Wernicke’s Aphasia, and Global Aphasia.
There are several symptoms of aphasia. Some of the common symptoms of aphasia you may experience include:
- Problems understanding speech or other people’s conversations
- Struggling to repeat words or sentences
- Speaking incomplete or broken sentences – leaving out connecting words like “is.”
- Difficulty writing
- Difficulty remembering common words such as names of objects or animals.
- Saying long and incomprehensible sentences
- Making up words or adding irrelevant words to sentences.
Get the guide
Latest from the Brainwire blog
5 tips for video chatting for those with communication disorders
Zoom, Google Meet, WebEx, FaceTime… these video conference platforms have become common household words over the past few years. However, for some people with communication disorders, video chatting can be incredibly challenging. Read on to learn a few tips we as...
New poll reveals patients are ready for virtual therapy options to address gaps in healthcare
When it comes to physical and speech-language therapy, how willing are patients to deviate from traditional tools to embrace virtual therapy aids and telehealth? The data from a survey from Constant Therapy Health, makers of mobile therapy app Constant Therapy,...
Tips and tools for using teletherapy in your practice
As the prevalence of teletherapy has grown, fueled by the need for physical-distancing during COVID-19, we as clinicians have been faced with the challenge of how to make teletherapy work for us and for our clients. The good news is that many therapists have already...
Watch how-to videos
FOR PATIENTS
$
Need help? Contact the Support team
$