Source:
Vendrell, J. M. (2001). Las afasias: semiología y tipos clínicos. Revista de neurología, 32(10), 980-986.
Concept
Annotations:
Language disorder caused by
brain injury in a person who could previously talk normally.
Types
Broca
Annotations:
Verbal expression very affected and a relatively better understanding, although
also affected. The
spontaneous language presents an important alteration of the
articulatory mechanisms, restricted vocabulary and significant reduction
of the length of the sentence; phonemic paraphasies occur and each sound element requires a particular effort to be articulated. They also present agraphia and occasionally
ideomotor apraxia.
Conduction
Annotations:
The spontaneous language shows a fluid articulation, but with the presence of anomic disorders and phonemic paraphasias. Understanding
is relatively preserved, although discrete problems can be observed for
phonemic discrimination and sentence comprehension. The most important semiologic data is a difficulty for repetition.
Alexia
Annotations:
Inhability to read due to brain damage.
Global
Annotations:
The term global aphasia is used when both expressive and receptive functions of language are seriously affected.
AnOmic
Annotations:
Altered ability to name (anomia) is the most common of aphasic disorders. When
this disorder is very marked, the spontaneous language is plagued by
circumlocutions that try to replace the lack of the name, or the patient
uses to use words "to fill".
Wernicke
Annotations:
The language presents a fluid articulation, although with abundant parafasias, and a serious disorder of the understanding. The paraphasias can be of phonetic or semantic type and the use of the grammatical elements is altered. Reading and writing are similarly affected.