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Bonnie Moore M.Cl.Sc.

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Voice, speech and language. Sometimes used interchangeably but important to distinguish ... Phonation (ability to make sounds) Resonance. Articulation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bonnie Moore M.Cl.Sc.


1
Aphasia in stroke is not just Aphasia
  • Bonnie Moore M.Cl.Sc.
  • Speech Language Pathologist
  • York Durham Aphasia Centre

2
Oral communication
  • Voice, speech and language
  • Sometimes used interchangeably but important to
    distinguish
  • Voice is produced by the vibration of the vocal
    cords
  • Voice is not always speech but can be produced by
    vertebrates using the lungs and the vocal cords

3
What is speech?
  • A way that humans express thoughts, feelings and
    ideas orally
  • Done through a series of complex movements that
    alter and mold the basic tone created by voice
    into specific, decodable sounds

4
What is language?
  • Language is our ability to recognize and use
    words and sentences.
  • We use language to understand what others say to
    us, to ask questions, give commands, comment and
    interchange.
  • Through language we listen, speak, read, and
    write.

5
Differences
  • How are language and speech different?

6
What is
  • Dysarthria??????

7
Dysarthria
  • speech that is slurred or hard to understand as a
    result of damage to the control centre in the
    brain
  • a group of related motor speech disorders
    resulting from disturbed muscular control over
    the speech mechanisms (Rosenbek and LaPointe)

8
What is
  • Apraxia???

9
Apraxia of speech
  • A disruption of motor planning/programming
  • impairment in the ability to program
    sensori-motor commands for the positioning and
    movement of muscles for speech

10
Say this phrase
  • Anee rotzelilmodet at hasefer shel haeeshah
    hazeh alyad ha shulchan
  • Apraxia includes inconsistent articulation
    errors, groping oral movements to locate the
    correct articulatory position, and increasing
    errors with increasing word and phrase length

11
Motor-systems affected???
  • Respiration (breathing)
  • Phonation (ability to make sounds)
  • Resonance
  • Articulation
  • Prosody (intonation, rate of speech, stress)

12
What might be wrong with the muscles?
13
What can be wrong with the muscles?
  • paralyzed
  • weak
  • spastic (too much tone)
  • flaccid (not enough tone)
  • uncoordinated

14
What can be wrong with the muscle movements?
  • overshoot (move too far)
  • undershoot (cant move all the way to the target)
  • move in wrong direction
  • too much strength
  • too little strength
  • poor timing
  • involuntary movements

15
Treatment of the disability - improving access
to communication
  • compensation strategies
  • shorter breath groups
  • high level of effort for voice
  • exaggerated consonants
  • slower rate

16
Enhancing participation
  • Environmental management
  • partner training
  • augment communication
  • alternative communication

17
your challenges
  • 1) trouble understanding client
  • 2) encouraging better speech
  • What do you do when you cant understand
    someone?

18
You cant understand
  • establish subject
  • ask questions that can be answered with a few
    words
  • clarify what you think that you heard
  • ask yes/no questions
  • remind client to use speech strategies
  • watch facial expression, body language
  • ask the person to spell

19
Encouraging better speech
  • ? honest feedback
  • tell person what they have to do in order to make
    speech more clear

20
Encouraging better speech
  • rate control
  • louder speech
  • a few words at a time
  • move your mouth more

21
What is Aphasia?
  • Aphasia is a general language impairment
  • Affects speaking, listening, reading, and writing
  • relatively common sequel of stroke and is also
    present in about one third of all head-injured
    persons who have been in a coma
  • Communication changes affect well being and self
    confidence

22
WHO terms
  • Impairment reduced speaking, listening, reading
    and writing ability
  • Disability restricted ability to communicate
    with others
  • Handicap limitation on the fulfillment of a
    persons role in society and reduced
    psycho-social well-being

23
Impact of the Loss on the Family
  • Loss of the person they did know
  • Loss of the lives they had together
  • Loneliness resulting from desertion by friends,
    colleagues etc.
  • Seeking ways to compensate for role changes
  • Learning to communicate again

24
For Aphasic Adults, we recognize their needs for
  • As much information as possible about aphasia
  • Communication support
  • Involvement in decision making
  • Waiting and patience in conversations

25
For family members, friends, and caregivers
  • Information about aphasia understand what has
    happened to the person and how they can be
    supportive communicative partners
  • Understanding experiencing loss, sadness,
    anger, frustration, fatigue, overwhelmed with new
    roles to take on

26
When a stroke affects the posterior part of the
left hemisphere
  • People can have great difficulty understanding
    what they hear or read
  • Analogy to hearing foreign language spoken
  • Know that people are speaking to them, follow
    melody of sentences, but have difficulty
    understanding the specific words or how words go
    together to convey complete thought

27
Also
  • People with serious comprehension problems may
    say or write, many words that dont make sense
  • This is because our dictionary of words is
    shelved in a similar region of the left brain
  • They may not realize that they are saying the
    wrong words

28
When a stroke injures the front regions of the
left hemisphere
  • Different kinds of language problems can result
  • This part of the brain is important for putting
    words together to form complete sentences
  • May get out the basic words but leave out little
    words like is the or ing
  • Example carbump.boom
  • May say or write a word close to the intended one
    but not exactly correct
  • Understand much of what they hear but not all

29
When a stroke affects an extensive portion of the
front and back region
  • May result in a more global aphasia
  • Have great difficulty in understanding and
    formulating words and sentences
  • May understand some words and may get out a few
    words but have severe difficulties communicating

30
Distinction between language and intelligence
  • When their only problem is aphasia, they cannot
    use language to communicate what they know.
  • They can think, but just cant say what they
    think
  • Still remember faces, know how to get from one
    place to another, have opinions

31
Challenge for all caregivers and healthcare
personnel
  • To provide individuals with aphasia a means to
    express what they know.
  • Make appropriate adaptations in the
    communication environment so that they grasp the
    content of conversations
  • Allow equal opportunities to participate in
    conversation, share ideas, news, opinions, and
    feelings

32
Communication Strategies
  • Help ensure that people with aphasia can get
    their message out and get their message in
  • Different techniques work with different types
    and severity of aphasia
  • Never rely only on speech as he/she may only
    understand some of what you say

33
To set the scene
  • Use face to face communication
  • Identify the topic ( write in large bold on pad
    with marker)
  • Use visual aids as much as possible
  • - maps, photographs, pictures, drawings

34
To help get the message in
  • Use key words ( written )
  • Use drawings, photo, pictures, or real objects
  • Use gestures, body and facial expressions
  • Speak slowly, clearly, with frequent pausing
  • Use simple vocabulary, short sentences and always
    verify that they understand

35
To Help Get the Message Out
  • Encourage drawing, gestures, writing
  • Ask yes/no questions
  • Use rating scales and offer verbal and/or written
    choices
  • Use visual aids ( maps, pictures, photos,
    drawings )
  • Always verify their message
  • Always have paper and marker handy
  • Learn to use cueing strategies for speech
    production

36
Remember
  • Let the person know if his/her message is not
    being understood
  • Take extra time and set a slower pace
  • Speak directly to the person with aphasia dont
    exclude them from conversation
  • If you ask a question, make sure a means of
    response is available ( pad and marker, yes/no
    gesture etc.)
  • Keep conversation in the here and now as much as
    possible
  • A picture is worth a thousand words

37
Aphasia, Dysarthria, Apraxia
  • Disorder Difficulty getting message
  • IN OUT
  • Aphasia X X
  • Dysarthria X
  • Apraxia X
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