Expressive dysphasia is also known as motor dysphasia
Another name for expressive dysphasia is Broca's aphasia. This condition affects a person's ability to produce language, resulting in difficulty with forming coherent sentences and expressing thoughts verbally.
Dysphasia is a condition that affects a person's ability to communicate through language, including speaking, understanding, and forming coherent sentences.
Anomic dysphasia is also referred to as amnesic dysphasia
The ICD-9 code for encounter for speech therapy for dysphasia secondary to an old cerebrovascular accident (CVA) is V57.89.
Examples of expressive language include poetry, metaphors, similes, storytelling, and emotive writing. These forms of language are used to convey feelings, emotions, and creativity in a personal and unique way.
Another name for homonyms is
Expressive dysphasia
Broca's dysphasia is the most common type of expressive dysphasia
Dysphasia is a condition that affects a person's ability to communicate through language, including speaking, understanding, and forming coherent sentences.
Anomic dysphasia is also referred to as amnesic dysphasia
Anomic dysphasia
Wernicke's dysphasia is the most common of the receptive dysphasia
Conduction dysphasia
Associative dysphasia
Receptive dysphasia
Unlike expressive dysphasia, the patient can speak fluently and articulately, but will utilize meaningless words, nonsensical grammar, and unnecessary phrases to the point of becoming incomprehensible
Stroke is the most common cause for dysphasia
Anomic dysphasia is distinguished by its disruption of a patient's word-retrieval skills. They will be unable to correctly name people or objects, causing them to pause or substitute generalized words