Although awake at times, she was aphasic and incommunicative, at least to the physicians. |
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If the patient is aphasic and is unable to follow commands, the physician should have the patient attempt imitative responses. |
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In April 1860, he had suddenly become unconscious, and although he partly recovered, he remained aphasic. |
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Do we really understand what aphasic patients are trying to tell us when we get informed consent for invasive procedures? |
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Our primary intention was to develop a therapy, which had the potential to be useful for a lot of aphasic patients. |
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Our studies on the deficits of the speech sound processing system are based on neuropsychological explorations of aphasic patients. |
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In those years, she was a timid performer and, offstage, quiet to the point of seeming aphasic. |
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The aphasic person may have difficulty understanding the words but they remain alert to non-verbal cues. |
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The first study deals with the development of an inventory to assess the quality of life of aphasic patients. |
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We wanted the programme to be useful for aphasic patients with varying degrees of lexical semantic impairment. |
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Her younger sister, Érica, who is aphasic, has recently made friends with a trumpet swan. |
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Progressively, the assault on his brain rendered him aphasic and paralysed on the right side. |
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The first man is in his forties. He is paralyzed on his right side and is aphasic. |
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Only a few rating scales for assessing performance in aphasic patients communicative activities in daily living are available. |
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We developed a pictorial quality of life inventory to have the opportunity to let aphasic patients rate their quality of life themselves. |
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It has been called parallel recovery because the aphasic speech parallels the previous relative abilities in the two languages. |
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Mildly aphasic and often confused, he could no longer defend himself. |
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It is important to realize that just because the aphasic person cannot speak, it doesn't necessarily mean that he or she cannot understand what is being said. |
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He may have the occasional aphasic moment, but he translates Horace, expounds on his anarchist forebears, and is eloquent in his memories of the struggle for a guaranteed annual income for longshoremen. |
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The writing and reading of aphasic individuals, therefore, usually commit the same type of error as their speech, while the reverse is not the case. |
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The premorbid knowledge and capacities of the aphasic subject seem to exert a strong influence on the test outcome and have to be taken in account. |
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Aphasia : The application field is wide because parent of an aphasic child can also accompany their child with our books as long as the child can speak small sentences. |
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A portion of the aphasic population without severe accompanying neuropsychological impairments is able to handle their rehabilitation without the presence of a therapist. |
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Both in the work with out-patients and in clinical rehabilitation, speech and language therapists usually try to achieve an impression about how the aphasic patients feel in their lives. |
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In the second study we investigated the quality of life of 31 aphasic patients and their relatives over a longer period to see, whether and how the estimation of quality of life changes. |
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The ALQI items were transformed into a pictorial version, in order to enable aphasic patients to understand the content of the statements and to give nonverbal responses. |
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The play is about a former aviatrix who has a stroke and becomes aphasic. |
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The aphasic people work in groups with the speech therapist. |
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The session will focus on the results of the possible change in the functional communication ability of the aphasic people during and after the intervention. |
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