If the abscess is in the frontal lobes of the brain, it may cause loss of memory and reduced attention span, and dysphasia. |
|
Irlen Syndrome can be found in combination with dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyspraxia, dyscalculia, dysphasia, or hyperactivity. |
|
We report the oral reading of a biscriptal patient who has previously been diagnosed with deep dysphasia in Turkish. |
|
Elderly people are often in this position owing to illnesses such as dementia and strokes that cause dysphasia. |
|
Louise has a variable level of understanding which would appear to be due to a receptive dysphasia. |
|
In spite of his dysphasia, his speech loosens and heartening glimpses of both his humour and his rich vocabulary begin to shine through. |
|
An evidence base is emerging for the efficacy of a number of speech and language therapy interventions, especially in dysphasia, stammering, laryngectomy, and dysphonia. |
|
The funds raised will go toward this organization's efforts to raise awareness about dysphasia in the various educational and health sectors. |
|
That's the only thing I have left, a little bit of dysphasia, a little bit of a problem sometimes naming something. |
|
Some may say surprising, when in fact his progress is exceptional considering that the 13-year-old has dysphasia, dyslexia and dysorthographia. |
|
The draft for a Royal Decree proposes to provide from now on an intervention by the health insurance for the logopedic treatments of dysphasia. |
|
The mission of the Association québécoise de la dysphasie Capitale-Nationale is to raise awareness about dysphasia and promote assistance services for children who have been afflicted by this disorder and their parents. |
|
Many patients primarily paediatric, geriatric and dysphasia find it difficult to swallow traditional tablets and capsules. |
|
Students diagnosed with severe dysphasia suffer from a serious and persistent language development disorder significantly limiting verbal interactions, socialisation and learning at school. |
|
In patients with dysphasia due to stroke, the follow-up period from their ictus until entry into the study was more than 6 months. |
|
In children with dysphasia, language problems are not the result of any intellectual or hearing impairment, relational problems, lack of stimulation or bilingualism. |
|
Cruelly, his dysphasia means he now speaks in fractured bursts, pausing between individual words, sometimes fighting to remember a phrase that's eluding him. |
|
Aphasia, also called dysphasia, defect in the expression and comprehension of language caused by damage to the temporal and the frontal lobes of the brain. |
|
Pleomorphic adenoma of tongue base causing dysphagia and dysphasia. |
|