Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

P1: SBT


0521779407-04 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:8


Aphasia 149

Aphasia...........................................


MICHAEL J. AMINOFF, MD, DSc
history & physical
Expressive (Broca) aphasia
■Speech telegrammic or lost; repetition, reading aloud & writing
impaired
■Associated features may include right hemiparesis, hemisensory dis-
turbance
Receptive (Wernicke) Aphasia
■Impaired comprehension & speech repetition; fluent but meaning-
less spontaneous speech; word salad; paraphasic errors; dysnomia
■Associated features may include right hemianopia
Global Aphasia
■Motor+receptive aphasia

Conduction Aphasia
■Impaired repetition
tests
■Cranial MRI or CT: lesion in inferior frontal region (expressive apha-
sia) or posterior part of superior temporal gyrus (receptive aphasia);
may be diffuse cerebral atrophy if aphasia is part of global cognitive
impairment
differential diagnosis
■Aphasia is symptom, not diagnosis
■Most common causes are stroke, tumor, dementing disorder

management
■Depends on cause (nature of lesion on imaging study)
treatment
■Treat underlying cause
■Speech therapy
specific therapy
N/A
follow-up
N/A

complications and prognosis
■Depend on cause
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