A dyslexic brain has the main impairment of the (LEFT temporal lobe).
A dyspraxic brain has the main impairment of the cerebellums,
(the cerebellums are left out of sync and is usually the left one that is weakest)
(leaving the left side of the body's movements out of sync with the right side)
Similarities:
both dyslexia and dyspraxia are associated with problems in the following:
Autism Spectrum Disorders are a range of neurological disorders that most markedly involve some degree of difficulty with communication and interpersonal relationships, as well as obsessions and repetitive behaviours while dyslexia is a neurological disorder that interferes with the acquisition of processing language, specifically in reading, writing, spelling, and handwriting.
Dysphagia is difficulty swallowing during one or more of the 3 swallowing phases. Dysphasia is impairment of speech and verbal comprehension, often associated with brain injury.
Dislexia affects both writing and reading.
One makes it hard to digest; the other makes it hard to read
dysphasia = difficulty speaking; impairment of speech and verbal comprehension
aphasia = partial or total loss of the ability to speak
Autism is a disorder in which there are a number of impairments, social skills being one of the most obvious.
Spelling
Anomic dysphasia is also referred to as amnesic dysphasia
Aphasia
Dysphasia
Aphasia and dysarthria are difficulty in speaking. aphasia the problem is in the brain. dysarthria the problem in the muscle or the nerve such as the hypoglossal nerve.aphasia due to damage or disease in the brain. dysarthria damage to the muscles or the nerves supply them such as the hypoglossal nerve.
The Porch Index of Speech Ability and the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination
The term "dysphasia" is more frequently used by European health professionals, whereas in North American the term, aphasia is more commonly preferred
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 language disorder in which there is an impairment of speech and of comprehension of speech. It is caused by brain damage, usually in the left side of the brain which is responsible for language and communication1.The term dysphasia has been eclipsed by the modern usage of the term "aphasia" particularly in the field of speech/language pathology so as not to confuse with the swallowing disorder "dysphagia". Aphasia literally means no speech. But the speech impairment in aphasia could range from complete absence of speech to difficulty in naming a few objects. Aphasia is generally tested on the basis of comprehension of speech, fluency of speech, repetition and naming of objects1.1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysphasia
on-line medical journal note: different types of dyslexia can be found in aphasia, especially inchildren (http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/voice/aphasia.htm)
Aphasia is a communication disorder that occurs as a result of damage to the language areas of the brain. It can affect the ability to speak, understand, read, and write. Various types of aphasia exist, depending on the location and extent of the brain lesion.
Wernicke's dysphasia is the most common of the receptive dysphasia
Receptive: Can't understand speech. Expressive: Can't produce speech (can't speak)