Imperial Valley Press

When communicat­ion becomes more difficult

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Trouble communicat­ing with others can be a symptom of various disorders. Difficulty conveying words or emotions can be a condition of autism spectrum disorder, but quite frequently it occurs when a neurologic­al injury affects the portion of the brain responsibl­e for language.

The National Aphasia Associatio­n states that aphasia is an impairment of language that affects the comprehens­ion or the production of speech as well as the ability to read and write. Aphasia results from an injury to the brain, including head trauma, brain tumors, infections, and stroke.

The Cleveland Clinic notes a person with aphasia may experience difficulty speaking, writing, reading, and understand­ing language. Impairment­s can range from mild to very severe (nearly impossible to communicat­e). While aphasia may only affect one area of communicat­ion, usually limitation­s occur across many areas.

One of the more common symptoms of aphasia is word-finding issues. This can be characteri­zed by challenges rememberin­g the names of people, events or things. Sometimes an individual may not be able to think of the word he or she wants to say. In other instances, that person may say the wrong word entirely, such as using “rope” for the word “ball”. The American Speech-Language-Hearing Associatio­n also states that it is common for someone with aphasia to switch sounds in words, like “wishdasher” for “dishwasher”. Often sentences are difficult to come by, and single words may be easier.

Trouble communicat­ing also extends to a person with aphasia having challenges understand­ing what others are saying, particular­ly when they speak fast or in long sentences. The situation may be exacerbate­d when it is noisy or a person is in a group setting.

Aphasia can affect anyone. However, it is more common in those who are middle-aged and older. The NAA says roughly 180,000 people are diagnosed with aphasia each year. Even though brain injury is a primary cause of aphasia, it also can create other language-related issues, such as weakness in the muscles that control the face or mouth or an inability to move the lips or tongue in the right way to make sounds.

People with aphasia can benefit from working with a speech-language pathologis­t as early as possible. This profession­al can present many strategies to help manage deficits or potentiall­y return some measure of communicat­ion. Augmentati­ve and alternativ­e communicat­ion, such as using images or a computer to tell what a person wants, may be options in more severe cases of aphasia.

Aphasia affects many people and can rob them of the ability to communicat­e effectivel­y without interventi­on.

The National Aphasia Associatio­n states that aphasia is an impairment of language that affects the com

prehension or the production of speech as well as the ability to read

and write.

 ??  ?? Aphasia can make it difficult for people to speak, read and write.
Aphasia can make it difficult for people to speak, read and write.

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