wernicke's aphasia
A patient with Wernicke's aphasia speaks fluently but nonsensically during a clinical assessment.
Noun: - A language disorder: A type of aphasia where a person can produce fluent, well-articulated speech that is often meaningless or contains incorrect words, while having severe difficulty understanding spoken or written language.
This term is used in medical, neurological, and psychological contexts to describe a specific clinical condition resulting from brain damage. - The neurologist diagnosed the patient with Wernicke's aphasia after the stroke. - A key feature of Wernicke's aphasia is fluent but nonsensical speech.
- Clinical diagnosis: The term is used to classify a patient's symptoms based on standardized language assessments, helping to localize the brain lesion (typically in Wernicke's area in the left temporal lobe).
- Contrast with other aphasias: It is often discussed in contrast to non-fluent aphasias like Broca's aphasia, where speech is halting but comprehension is relatively preserved.
- Receptive aphasia: A synonym often used interchangeably with Wernicke's aphasia, emphasizing the profound comprehension deficit.
- Fluent aphasia: A broader category that includes Wernicke's aphasia, describing aphasias where speech output is fluent but impaired in content.
- Anomia: A difficulty in word-finding that is also a common symptom within Wernicke's aphasia.
- Paraphasia: The production of incorrect words or sounds, which is a hallmark of the speech in this condition (e.g., saying "telephone" for "television").
- Receptive aphasia
- Sensory aphasia (an older, less common term)
There are no common idioms or phrasal verbs for this specific medical term. It is used in its literal, clinical sense.
A patient with Wernicke's aphasia speaks fluently but nonsensically during a clinical assessment.
- aphasia characterized by fluent but meaningless speech and severe impairment of the ability understand spoken or written words