Aphasia in a sentence as a noun

Any patient with an aphasia or neural defect will tell you they just cannot think in a way that they used to.

If you have some form of aphasia it may be hard for you to find the words you need to say, but you can still choose and reason about what you're thinking about.

After a number of doctors and tests ruling out a TIA, best guess is one-time transient aphasia from a migraine aura.

However, these aphasias are known to remit and studies show that other portions of the brain have taken over from the damaged portion.

There are also cases of patients with speech aphasia who can speak while walking, but can't while at rest; it turns out that brain structures for speech and locomotion are interrelated.

Excessive intake can lead to convulsions and repeated abuse can result in damage to Broca's area, a speech center of the brain, which can result in aphasia.

I'm waiting on a larger study to confirm or dispel the results of that small study that showed significant risk of aphasia and FTD associated with vasectomy.

This is supported by both neuroimaging and studies of patients with aphasia, which show that people with damage to brain regions governing conventional speech can still retain the capacity to swear.

Or loose the understanding of what objects were represented by the words someone hears/reads.> What is aphasia?> Imagine knowing what you want to say, but your brain refuses to let you utter even the simplest word.

Her first-hand depictions of short-term memory loss, aphasia and other consequences were especially illuminating.

They started out building a tool for aphasia patients to communicate with hospital staff and have pivoted to the more general mission of improving the UX of intra-hospital communication.

Money can let you take more risks, market better, do things faster and larger -- but none of those capabilities are 'network effects', any more than a 'mountain lion' is a 'wedding ring'.Geez, people, is there some sort of contagious aphasia going around?

Aphasia definitions

noun

inability to use or understand language (spoken or written) because of a brain lesion