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Aphasia is a frustrating disorder that impacts adults’ communication abilities (reading, writing, listening and speaking), often as a result of stroke or other brain injury. Durham Rehabilitation Institute and the Triangle Aphasia Project Unlimited host
Despite litany of challenges, 13-year-old inspires others At age 13, Gloria Mengel already has faced two cancers, blindness, two hernias and a stroke. By BRIAN BURNES The Kansas City Star By BRIAN BURNES The Kansas City Star Updated: 2012-02-21T05:27:10Z
I saw somebody who had mild aphasia and could get by in simple conversation, but there were problems ... We worked with him on reading because it was important to him when he got back to work to read for great detail.
FARMINGTON — Ernest Brown, of Kirtland, had a stroke in June 2009 and stopped understanding words. "He would say yes to everything, but he couldn't follow instructions," she said. the open meeting will be at 10 a.m. March 10, at the San Juan Regional Reh
Main Category: Stroke Also Included In: Medicare / Medicaid / SCHIP Article Date: 19 Feb 2012 - 0:00 PST email to a friend printer friendly opinions Stroke-related language impairment adds about $1,703 per patient to medical costs the first year after st
The Cognitive Neuropsychology Lab within Georgetown University’s Center for Aphasia Research and Rehabilitation, directed by Rhonda Friedman, Ph.D. , is seeking a full-time research assistant to support two ongoing studies examining the decline of word-fi
are the chapters on selected subtypes of aphasia. We are grateful to the contributors of the previous editions, and we now welcome a new generation of experts on a wider array of topics.
Frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis are closely related clinical syndromes with overlapping molecular pathogenesis. Several families have been reported with members affected by frontotemporal dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
THURSDAY, Feb. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Average medical costs for a stroke patient with language impairment (aphasia) are more than $1,700 higher in the first year after stroke than for a patient without aphasia, a new study finds. Researchers analyzed the
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I saw somebody who had mild aphasia and could get by in simple conversation, but there were problems ... We worked with him on reading because it was important to him when he got back to work to read for great detail.
are the chapters on selected subtypes of aphasia. We are grateful to the contributors of the previous editions, and we now welcome a new generation of experts on a wider array of topics.
