Anomic dysphasia is also referred to as amnesic 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.
"The aneurysm left me with severe right sided weakness and expressive dysphasia"
When you look up the code 787 it will reference 438.82
A word that has the same meaning as another word is a synonym.
Another word for rule of language is Grammar.
Anomic 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
Expressive dysphasia
Amnesic 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
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.
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 word "dysphasia" breaks down into "dys-" which means difficult, and "-phasia" which refers to speech. Therefore, dysphasia is a condition characterized by difficulty in speaking or understanding language.
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.
Broca's dysphasia is the most common type of expressive dysphasia
Conduction dysphasia
Associative dysphasia
Receptive dysphasia