Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Willis’ aphasia brings disorder to spotlight

About 2M people in US living with isolating condition

- By Laura J. Nelson, Thomas Curwen and Emily Baumgaertn­er

Living with aphasia has been compared with living in a country where you don’t speak the language.

Gestures, sign language or other forms of communicat­ion may not be much help. And the people who want to help you struggle to understand.

“You know what things are. You are the person you were — but others don’t know that,” said Lyn Turkstra, a professor of speech-language pathology and neuroscien­ce at McMaster University in Canada. “All of a sudden, you can’t express thoughts and feelings as you once could, and if it is progressiv­e, you’re feeling it slip away gradually.”

Bruce Willis’ retirement from a four-decade acting career after an aphasia diagnosis has put the little-known disorder in the spotlight. People living with aphasia, as well as their caregivers and advocates for treatment of the disorder, say they hope his diagnosis will help reduce the stigma of invisible illnesses and lead to better understand­ing of a frustratin­g, isolating condition that affects about 2 million Americans.

Willis’ diagnosis has already sparked a surge of interest in the condition, said Darlene Williamson, the volunteer president of the National Aphasia Associatio­n, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps patients and their caregivers. The Willis family’s news echoes other celebrity health decisions, including Betty Ford’s 1974 battle with breast cancer, Michael J. Fox’s disclosure in 1998 that he had Parkinson’s

disease, and Angelina Jolie’s preventive double mastectomy in 2013.

“How many people have ever heard of aphasia? Pitifully few,” Williamson said. “If you tell someone, ‘I have aphasia,’ they have no idea what it is. Just for the word itself to be meaningful is a huge desire for our community.”

Aphasia is not a cognitive disorder and does not affect intelligen­ce. Most frequently triggered by strokes or other brain trauma, the condition makes it difficult to speak, to find the proper words and to understand what is said or written. In less frequent cases, aphasia can be brought on by neurodegen­erative diseases that cause cognitive issues.

For both types of aphasia, the resulting communicat­ion difficulti­es can lead to shame, embarrassm­ent and frustratio­n.

“The general public assumes that if someone doesn’t respond, they are intellectu­ally challenged,”

said Roberta DePompei, a retired professor of speech-language pathology at the University of Akron. “They are treated like a child, when inside, they are still the same person. It becomes humiliatin­g to be treated that way.”

The condition is more common than Parkinson’s disease or multiple sclerosis but far less known. Two years ago, 86.2% of Americans had not heard of aphasia, while about 7% knew that it was a communicat­ion disorder, according to a survey by the National Aphasia Associatio­n.

Language is “one of the things that make humans really human,” said Dr. Mario F. Mendez, a behavioral neurologis­t at UCLA. Because aphasia affects a person’s ability to use symbols — whether words, sign language, musical notations, even Morse code — the condition can be difficult to work around.

How aphasia affects someone and how it can be treated vary widely.

Mendez said he recently saw three distinct aphasia patients in one day: The first struggled to remember certain words; a second distorted the pronunciat­ion; and a third simply couldn’t understand what the doctor was saying.

The patient who couldn’t recall terms was able to express himself by explaining around them and is a good candidate for speech therapy. Meanwhile, the visit with the patient who struggled to understand language led to “a very difficult conversati­on with his wife.”

For patients whose aphasia is brought on by “insidious, slowly progressiv­e” degenerati­on, rather than a stroke, an early warning sign is often trouble finding a word, Mendez said. Sometimes called the “tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon,” people are forced to stop midsentenc­e and search for what should come next.

That type of aphasia, called primary progressiv­e, is understudi­ed and underdiagn­osed, in part because people are afraid to go to the doctor when they start experienci­ng warning signs, Williamson said.

Early diagnosis and interventi­on are key so patients can start language therapy and develop a system of communicat­ion for when speech eventually fails, she said. Talking to a doctor, a speech therapist and a support group will give families more time to sort out finances and decision-making duties, and to set expectatio­ns for how life can take shape.

With good medical care and speech therapy, most patients whose aphasia is related to a stroke or another brain injury should see some improvemen­t, Williamson said. People whose aphasia is brought on by cognitive decline should not expect the same outcome, she said, and should instead focus on “maintainin­g for as long as possible.”

Whether people living with aphasia can participat­e fully in society, including working, depends on the severity of their case and whether they are facing other health issues stemming from the same incident that caused the aphasia, such as mobility problems caused by a stroke.

People who worked with the 67-year-old Willis on recent films raised concerns that he did not seem to be fully aware of his surroundin­gs and struggled to remember his lines, The Times has reported. Production­s reworked their schedules and scripts to compress his dialogue and the amount of time he spent shooting.

An actor who traveled with the star fed his dialogue through an earpiece, known in the industry as an “earwig,” according to several sources. Most action scenes, particular­ly those that involved choreograp­hed gunfire, were filmed using a body double.

“No matter what the cause of aphasia, there’s no cure,” Williamson said. “Almost no one who’s diagnosed with aphasia is ever 100% who they were before. We never talk in terms of a cure. We talk in terms of living successful­ly and returning to participat­ion in life.”

Some people with aphasia may be able to return to work with reasonable accommodat­ion. For example, if their disorder makes it harder for them to type, they could dictate rather than write, Williamson said. Others may choose to find another line of work that isn’t as taxing, or turn to volunteeri­ng rather than working full time.

People living with aphasia that is coupled with cognitive decline, she said, “do continue to work for a period of time until it just doesn’t make sense anymore.”

 ?? ANGELA WEISS/GETTY-AFP ?? People living with aphasia hope Bruce Willis’ diagnosis will help reduce the stigma.
ANGELA WEISS/GETTY-AFP People living with aphasia hope Bruce Willis’ diagnosis will help reduce the stigma.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States