What Is Motor Aphasia?
Motor aphasia, language expression disorder. That is usually called "expressive aphasia" and "cortical motor aphasia" and so on. Broca was first reported in 1861. Caused by lesions in the third frontal gyrus of the dominant hemisphere. Obstacles to oral expression are the most prominent. Mainly manifested in laborious speech, fluency, sparse language, electrode-type (mainly substantive training), can express basic meaning. Research in the late 20th century shows. Patients with typical clinical manifestations are usually caused by larger lesions including Broca's area. [1]
Motor aphasia
- Motor aphasia, language expression disorder. That is usually called "expressive aphasia" and "cortical motor aphasia" and so on. Broca was first reported in 1861. Caused by lesions in the third frontal gyrus of the dominant hemisphere. Obstacles to oral expression are the most prominent. Mainly manifested in laborious speech, fluency, sparse language, electrode-type (mainly substantive training), can express the basic meaning. Research in the late 20th century shows. Patients with typical clinical manifestations are usually caused by larger lesions including Broca's area. [1]
- 1860 as a surgeon
- This aphasia is mainly caused by damage to the Broca area. Its characteristics are: patients can understand other people's language but can't use language to talk to others, and some patients can pronounce but can't form language. According to the degree of aphasia, it can be divided into two categories: complete motor aphasia and incomplete motor aphasia.
- People with complete motor aphasia do not speak at all, not even individual words, words, or syllables.
- Patients with incomplete motor aphasia can usually make individual speeches, but they cannot form speeches or arrange words according to grammatical structure. As a result, the individual voices they make are disorganized and cannot be understood.
- For example, you should say "Hello!" To someone, but people with incomplete motor aphasia may say "Hello!"
- Some patients with mild motor aphasia often have speech repetition, that is, after a word or syllable is spoken, it is forced to repeat it automatically, causing the word or syllable to involuntarily break into the next word or language Of the production process. For example, after asking the patient to say the word "rice", and then asking him to say the word "drink water," he would repeatedly say "fan ... fan ... fan ..." fan drink drink ... drink water water".
- Motor aphasia does not necessarily impede dyslexia and writing. [3] '