Damage to the upper temporal lobe, lower parietal, or connection between the Wernicke's and Broca's areas
Conduction dysphasia
Associative dysphasia
Transcortical dysphasia is caused by damage to the language-dominant brain that separates all or parts of the central region from the rest of the brain
Dysphasia can be prevented by avoiding the causes of brain injury and stroke, such as high blood pressure
Anomic dysphasia is also referred to as amnesic dysphasia
Broca's dysphasia is the most common type of expressive dysphasia
Expressive dysphasia
Anomic dysphasia
Receptive dysphasia
Stroke is the most common cause for dysphasia
The term "dysphasia" is a condition (difficulty with language), and does not have a singular or plural.One might refer to various forms or types of dysphasia.
The most common type of receptive dysphasia is Wernicke's aphasia. This is characterized by fluent but nonsensical speech, poor comprehension, and difficulty with word retrieval and naming objects. It is typically caused by damage to the left temporal lobe of the brain.