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
Transcortical dysphasia
It is also known as isolation syndrome
Dysphasia can be prevented by avoiding the causes of brain injury and stroke, such as high blood pressure
Wernicke's dysphasia is the most common of the receptive dysphasia
Anomic dysphasia is also referred to as amnesic dysphasia
Broca's dysphasia is the most common type of expressive dysphasia
Expressive dysphasia
Anomic dysphasia
Conduction dysphasia
Associative dysphasia
Receptive dysphasia
It results from damage to both the anterior and posterior regions of the language-dominant hemisphere