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syntactical aphasia Aphasia in which the words are fairly well pronounced but are spoken in short phrases or poorly constructed sentences without articles, prepositions, or conjunctions.
(05 Mar 2000)
impressive aphasia Aphasia in which there is impairment in the comprehension of spoken and written words, associated with effortless, articulated, but paraphrasic, speech and writing; malformed words, substitute words, and enologisms are charcteristic. When severe, and speech is incomprehensible, it is called jargon aphasia. The patient often appears unaware of his deficit.
Synonym: fluent aphasia, impressive aphasia, posterior aphasia, psychosensory aphasia, receptive aphasia, Wernicke's aphasia.
(05 Mar 2000)
total aphasia In which all aspects of speech and communication are severely impaired. at best, patients can understand or speak only a few words or phrases; they cannot read or write.
Synonym: mixed aphasia, total aphasia.
(05 Mar 2000)
transcortical aphasia An aphasia in which the unaffected motor and sensory language areas are isolated from the rest of the hemispheric cortex. Subdivided into transcortical sensory and transcortical motor aphasias.
(05 Mar 2000)
jargon aphasia A form of aphasia characterised by an inability to construct a grammatical sentence, and the use of unintelligible or incorrect words; caused by a lesion in the dominant temporal lobe.
Synonym: agrammatica, agrammatologia, jargon aphasia.
(05 Mar 2000)
expressive aphasia A type of aphasia in which there is a deficit in speech production or language output, often accompanied by a deficit in communicating by writing, signs, etc. The patient is aware of his impairment.
Synonym: anterior aphasia, ataxic aphasia, Broca's aphasia, expressive aphasia, nonfluent aphasia.
(05 Mar 2000)
Kussmaul's aphasia Mutism in psychosis; a misnomer; not actually an aphasia.
(05 Mar 2000)
fluent aphasia Aphasia in which there is impairment in the comprehension of spoken and written words, associated with effortless, articulated, but paraphrasic, speech and writing; malformed words, substitute words, and enologisms are charcteristic. When severe, and speech is incomprehensible, it is called jargon aphasia. The patient often appears unaware of his deficit.
Synonym: fluent aphasia, impressive aphasia, posterior aphasia, psychosensory aphasia, receptive aphasia, Wernicke's aphasia.
(05 Mar 2000)
functional aphasia Nonorganic aphasia related to conversion hysteria.
(05 Mar 2000)
accessory visual apparatus The eyelids, with lashes and eyebrows, lacrimal apparatus, conjunctival sac, and extrinsic muscles of the eyeball.
Synonym: organa oculi accessoria, accessory organs, accessory visual apparatus, adnexa oculi, appendages of eye.
(05 Mar 2000)
Bender Visual Motor Gestalt test <psychology> A psychological test used by neurologists and clinical psychologists to measure a person's ability to visually copy a set of geometric designs.
It consists of nine geometric designs on cards. The subject is asked to redraw them from memory after each one is presented individually. It is useful for measuring visuospatial and visuomotor coordination to detect brain damage.
Synonym: Bender Visual Motor Gestalt test.
(14 Aug 2000)
Broca's visual plane A plane drawn through the visual axes of each eye.
(05 Mar 2000)
receptor, visual The layer of rods and cones, the visual cells, of the retina.
(12 Dec 1998)
pattern recognition, visual Visually perceived characters, shapes, displays, or designs.
(12 Dec 1998)
visual Pertaining to vision or sight.
Origin: L. Visualis, from videre = to see
(18 Nov 1997)
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