Dysarthria vs. Aphasia
The ability to communicate is essential to the human experience. With it we are able to express our ideas, emotions, thoughts, and feelings. Speech and language disorders such as dysarthria and aphasia, however, can disrupt this essential ability, making both speech and understanding others a challenge.
In this comprehensive graphic, we break down the differences between dysarthria and aphasia, and explain their symptoms, causes, and treatments.
What Is the Difference Between Aphasia and Dysarthria?
While dysarthria and aphasia are both communication disorders, they affect different aspects of communication. Aphasia is a language disorder caused by damage to parts of the brain that control language functions. This condition can impair an individual’s ability to speak, understand, read, or write. It usually occurs after a stroke or traumatic brain injury (TBI) and can vary in severity depending on how much of the brain was damaged.
Dysarthria, on the other hand, is a motor speech disorder. It happens when the muscles used for speaking—such as those in the lips, tongue, vocal cords, and diaphragm—become impaired due to damage to the nervous system (e.g., become weak, become too tight, do not move enough, move too much, etc.). Unlike aphasia, dysarthria doesn’t affect a person’s ability to understand language or find words. Rather, it makes it difficult for them to articulate and speak clearly.
You can have dysarthria without aphasia. Since dysarthria is a motor speech disorder, it only affects the muscles that control speech, not the brain’s language centers. A person with dysarthria may fully understand language, but their ability to communicate verbally is impaired because of difficulty controlling the movements of their mouth, tongue, or vocal cords.
For example, someone with Myasthenia gravis might develop dysarthria due to muscle weakness but retain their ability to understand and write fluently. Alternatively, people with aphasia may have no physical problems with the muscles required for speech but struggle to find words or make sense of sentences due to brain damage.
Get the guide
Latest from the Brainwire blog
What Does a Stroke Feel Like? Signs and Symptoms
A stroke happens when blood flow to a part of the brain is cut off temporarily or permanently, thereby producing symptoms like weakness and numbness in different areas of the body. This happens when a clot blocks a vessel, often an artery, or when the vessel bursts or ruptures.
Looking back: 2024 Constant Therapy milestones
At each year's end, we like to take a moment to reflect on the important milestones that Constant Therapy accomplished in the 12 months prior. The year of 2024 included impactful growth in a number of key areas, including new partnerships, enhanced app features, and...
A guide to gifts for brain injury and stroke survivors (and the clinicians who care for them!)
In celebration of all the summer birthdays around here, we decided to update our official gift guide to include a few new items you can gift all year long! This guide to gifts for brain injury and stroke survivors has even more suggestions for the stumped shopper. ...
Watch how-to videos
FOR PATIENTS
$
Need help? Contact the Support team
$