Aphasia

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Aphasia
ICD-10 F80.0-F80.2, R47.0
ICD-9 315.31, 784.3
DiseasesDB 4024
MedlinePlus 003204
MeSH D001037

Template:Search infobox Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Assistant Editor(s)-In-Chief: Leah Biller

Overview

Aphasia (or aphemia) is a loss of the ability to produce and/or comprehend language, due to injury to brain areas specialized for these functions. It is not a result of deficits in sensory, intellect, or psychiatric functioning. It is also not due to muscle weakness or a cognitive disorder.

Depending on the area and extent of the damage, someone suffering from aphasia may be able to speak but not write, or vice versa, or display any of a wide variety of other deficiencies in language comprehension and production, such as being able to sing but not speak. Aphasia may co-occur with speech disorders such as dysarthria or apraxia of speech, which also result from brain damage.

Causes

Usually, aphasias are a result of damage (lesions) to the language centres of the brain (like Broca's area). These areas are almost always located in the left hemisphere, and in most people this is where the ability to produce and comprehend language is found. However, in a very small number of people language ability is found in the right hemisphere. In either case, damage to these language areas can be caused by a stroke, traumatic brain injury, or other head injury. Aphasia may also develop slowly, as in the case of a brain tumor or progressively neurological disease. It may also be caused by a sudden hemorrhagic event within the brain.

Causes of Aphasia in Alphabetical Order

Complete Differential Diagnosis of the Causes of Aphasia (by organ system)

Cardiovascular Aortic Arch SyndromeCerebral arteriovenous malformationCerebral venous sinus thrombosisCerebrovascular accidentMulti-infarct dementiaStrokeTransient ischemic attackTraumatic brain injuryWernicke syndromeWernicke's encephalopathy
Chemical / poisoning No underlying causes
Dermatologic No underlying causes
Drug Side Effect Insulin shock therapySantonin
Ear Nose Throat Hypoglycemia
Endocrine No underlying causes
Environmental No underlying causes
Gastroenterologic Wernicke's encephalopathy
Genetic MASA syndrome
Hematologic Hemorrhage (severe)
Iatrogenic No underlying causes
Infectious Disease Brain abscessHerpes EncephalitisTertiary syphilis
Musculoskeletal / Ortho No underlying causes
Neurologic Alexia (disorder)Alzheimer's dementiaArcuate fasciculus damageBrain abscessBrain tumorCerebral arteriovenous malformationCerebral atrophyCerebral venous sinus thrombosisCerebrovascular accidentDementiaDissociative stateFrontotemporal dementiaFrontotemporal lobar degenerationGerstmann syndromeHemispatial neglectLandau-Kleffner syndromeMalignant AstrocytomasMASA syndromeMigraineMotor neuron diseaseMulti-infarct dementiaMultiple sclerosisNonconvulsive status epilepticusPick's diseasePostconcussion syndromeRasmussen's encephalitisSchilder's diseaseSemantic dementiaSenile dementiaStrokeSubdural hematomaTemporal lobe brain abscessTemporal lobe atrophyTertiary syphilisTransient ischemic attack
Nutritional / Metabolic No underlying causes
Obstetric/Gynecologic No underlying causes
Oncologic Brain tumorIntracranial space-occupying lesionMalignant Astrocytomas
Opthalmologic No underlying causes
Overdose / Toxicity Insulin shock therapySantoninSedative-hypnotic drug intoxication
Psychiatric DementiaDissociative stateFrontotemporal dementiaFrontotemporal lobar degenerationMulti-infarct dementiaSemantic dementiaSenile dementia
Pulmonary Aortic Arch Syndrome
Renal / Electrolyte No underlying causes
Rheum / Immune / Allergy No underlying causes
Sexual Tertiary syphilis
Trauma Postconcussion syndromeSubdural hematomaTraumaTraumatic brain injury
Urologic No underlying causes
Miscellaneous No underlying causes

Prognosis

The prognosis of those with aphasia varies widely, and is dependent upon age of the patient, site and size of lesion, and type of aphasia.

Diagnosis

Aphasia can be assessed in a variety of ways, from quick clinical screening at the bedside to several-hour-long batteries of tasks that examine the key components of language and communication.

Symptoms

Any of the following can be considered symptoms of aphasia:

  • Inability to comprehend language
  • Inability to pronounce, not due to muscle paralysis or weakness
  • Inability to speak spontaneously
  • Inability to form words
  • Inability to name objects
  • Poor enunciation
  • Excessive creation and use of personal neologisms
  • Inability to repeat a phrase
  • Persistent repetition of phrases
  • Paraphasia (substituting letters, syllables or words)
  • Agrammatism (inability to speak in a grammatically correct fashion)
  • Dysprosody (alterations in inflexion, stress, and rhythm)
  • Uncompleted sentences
  • Inability to read
  • Inability to write

Laboratory Findings

The following laboratory tests are suggested:

Electrolyte and Biomarker Studies

MRI and CT

  • Cerebral imaging critical.
  • MRI has highest specificity and sensitivity

Other Imaging Findings

  • Electroencephalogram (EEG)

Other Diagnostic Studies


Classification of aphasia

Classifying the different subtypes of aphasia is difficult and has led to disagreements among experts. The locationist model is the original model, but modern anatomical techniques and analyses have shown that precise connections between brain regions and symptom classification don't exist. The neural organization of language is complicated; language is a comprehensive and complex behavior and it makes sense that it isn't the product of some small, circumscribed region of the brain.
No classification of patients in subtypes and groups of subtypes is adequate. Only about 60% of patients will fit in a classification scheme such as fluent/nonfluent/pure aphasias. There is a huge variation among patients with the same diagnosis, and aphasias can be highly selective. For instance, patients with naming deficits (anomic aphasia) might show an inability only for naming buildings, or people, or colors. [1]

The locationist model

Cortex

The locationist model attempts to classify the aphasia by major characteristics and then link these to areas of the brain in which the damage has been caused. The initial two categories here were devised by early neurologists working in the field, namely Paul Broca and Carl Wernicke. Other researchers have added to the model, resulting in it often being referred to as the "Boston-Neoclassical Model". The most prominent writers on this topic have been Howard Goodglass and Edith Kaplan.

  • Individuals with Broca's aphasia (also termed expressive aphasia) were once thought to have ventral temporal damage though more recent work by Nina Dronkers using imaging and 'lesion analysis' has revealed that patients with Broca's Aphasia have lesions to the medial insular cortex. Broca missed these lesions because his studies did not disect the brains of diseased patients so only the more temporal damage was visible. Individuals with Broca's aphasia often have right-sided weakness or paralysis of the arm and leg because the frontal lobe is also important for body movement.
  • In contrast to Broca's aphasia, damage to the temporal lobe may result in a fluent aphasia that is called Wernicke's aphasia (also termed sensory aphasia). These individuals usually have no body weakness because their brain injury is not near the parts of the brain that control movement.
  • Working from Wernicke's model of aphasia, Ludwig Lichtheim proposed five other types of aphasia but these were not tested against real patients until modern imaging made more indepth studies available. The other five types of aphasia in the locationist model are:
  1. Pure word deafness
  2. Conduction aphasia
  3. Apraxia of speech, which is now considered a separate disorder in itself.
  4. Transcortical motor aphasia
  5. Transcortical sensory aphasia
  • Anomia is another type of aphasia proposed under what is commonly known as the Boston-Neoclassical model, which is essentially a difficulty with naming. A final type of aphasia, global aphasia, results from damage to extensive portions of the language areas of the brain.

Fluent, non-fluent and "pure" aphasias

The different types of aphasia can be divided into three categories: fluent, non-fluent and "pure" aphasias.[2]

  • Fluent aphasias, also called receptive aphasias, are impairments related mostly to the input or reception of language, with difficulties either in auditory verbal comprehension or in the repetition of words, phrases, or sentences spoken by others. Speech is easy and fluent, but there are difficulties related to the output of language as well, such as paraphasia. Examples of fluent aphasias are: Wernicke's aphasia, Transcortical sensory aphasia, Conduction aphasia, Anomic aphasia
  • "Pure" aphasias are selective impairments in reading, writing, or the recognition of words. These disorders may be quite selective. For example, a person is able to read but not write, or is able to write but not read. Examples of pure aphasias are: Alexia, Agraphia, Pure word deafness

The cognitive neuropsychological model

The cognitive neuropsychological model builds on cognitive neuropsychology. It assumes that language processing can be broken down into a number of modules, each of which has a specific function. Hence there is a module which recognises phonemes as they are spoken and a module which stores formulated phonemes before they are spoken. Use of this model clinically involves conducting a battery of assessments (usually from the PALPA), each of which tests one or a number of these modules. Once a diagnosis is reached as to where the impairment lies, therapy can proceed to treat the individual module.

A few less common subtypes include:

A combination of subtypes is possible.

Primary and secondary aphasia

Aphasia can be divided into primary and secondary aphasia.[3]

  • Primary aphasia is due to problems with language-processing mechanisms.
  • Secondary aphasia is the result of other problems, like memory impairments, attention disorders, or perceptual problems.

Types of Aphasia

Treatment

  • Speech therapy
  • Correction of underlying etiology

Acute Pharmacotherapies

See also

Sources

Academic references

  • R. Chapey (Ed.) (2001). Language Intervention Strategies in Aphasia and Related Neurogenic Communication Disorders (Fourth Edition). Philadelphia: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins.
  • Goodglass, H. & Kaplan, E. (1972). Assessment of Aphasia and Related Disorders. Philadelphia: Lea and Febinger.
  • Kay, J., Lesser, R., & Coltheart, M. (1992). Psycholinguistic Assessments of Language Processing in Aphasia (PALPA). Hove: Erlbaum.
  • Spreen, O. & Risser, A.H. (2003). Assessment of Aphasia. New York: Oxford University Press.

Personal experiences of aphasia

  • Hale, S (2003), The Man Who Lost His Language, Penguin.
  • Paul E. Berger and Stephanie Mensh, How to Conquer the World With One Hand...And an Attitude, 2nd Ed., ISBN 0-9668378-7-8
  • Cindy Greatrex (2005) Aphasia in the Deaf Community.
  • Dardick, Geeta (1991), Prisoner of Silence, Reader's Digest, June issue

References

  1. Kolb & Whishaw: Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology (2003), page 502, 505, 511.
  2. Kolb & Whishaw: Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology (2003), pages 502-504. The whole paragraph "fluent, non-fluent and pure aphasias" is written with help of this reference.
  3. http://christofflab.psych.ubc.ca/psych260/docs/L12-Language.pdf
  4. Sailer, Christian, Wasner, Susanne. Differential Diagnosis Pocket. Hermosa Beach, CA: Borm Bruckmeir Publishing LLC, 2002:77 ISBN 1591032016
  5. Kahan, Scott, Smith, Ellen G. In A Page: Signs and Symptoms. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2004:68 ISBN 140510368X

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