Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Robbed of power to communicate
Posted by iRDMuni at 12:31 PM 0 comments
Recovery and treatment of aphasia after stroke: functional imaging studies
Crinion, J.T., et al. - Recent studies of aphasia recovery allow a deeper appreciation of the changing neuronal activation patterns associated with time after stroke. The distinction between neuronal reorganization that does and does not sustain recovery in the chronic phase after stroke, either spontaneous or in response to treatment, remains controversial and further studies are necessary [more...]
Posted by iRDMuni at 9:08 AM 0 comments
Aphasia
... Purposeful Relevant, Educating Clinicians Meaningful, for and There's so yet excellent support available on that it's often too difficult to know where to begin. But immediately you can relax since this website holds a means of file. A absolute advantage that comes with a success net option gives businesses can maintain over their store front rivals brick and mortar stores is the lower costs of running their office. That is the inspiration for this porta
Posted by iRDMuni at 8:56 AM 0 comments
David Shenk Answers Your Questions About Alzheimer's
Shenk: Very important question. "Dementia" and "senile dementia" are generic terms that describe a set of symptoms - memory loss, confusion, aphasia, and so on. Every case of dementia is caused by one or another disease. Alzheimer's is one of those diseases, and is by far the most common cause of dementia. There are other diseases that cause dementia - multi-infarct dementia, fronto-temporal dementia, and others. But the important point here is that it is no longer acceptable for a doctor to leave a diagnosis at "just
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Posted by iRDMuni at 8:48 AM 0 comments
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Default Is this good English?
I am translating a text from Norwegian into English, and wonder if the following sentences are OK:
"The earliest known written observation that apoplexy, lethargy or other serious brain diseases may lead to damage of speech without a synchronous paralysis of the tongue, is found in a letter from the German doctor Atheus to a Swiss colleague, Schenkius, in 1585."
"Even if aphasia is a linguistic phenomena, the study of aphasia has until recently been dealt with largely by neurologists and psychologists, not linguistics."
Posted by iRDMuni at 2:18 PM 0 comments