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Communication Disorders - Fact Sheet
A
brain injury can result in impairment of communication abilities by
impairing hearing, the muscle movements of speech or even the Cognitive
processes that put words to thoughts.
Communication problems that result from acquired brain injury vary, and
depend on many factors which include an individual’s personality,
pre-injury abilities, and the severity of the brain damage. Typical
effects may include slow or slurred speech, difficulty swallowing,
drooling or a nasal tone. Communication problems can be a mixture of
both receptive and expressive problems.
Receptive Skills
Receptive skills are the skills involved in receiving and understanding
language. Indicators of receptive difficulties may include lack of
understanding or attention, problems with quickly given complex
information and requests for repetition. It should be remembered that
hearing loss can also occur following a brain injury and lead to the
same effects. Ideally a hearing test by an audiologist should occur
first before assessing receptive skills.
Behaviours that may indicate problems with receptive language include:
- Poor recognition of vocabulary;
- Continually asking for things to be repeated;
- Difficulty with the speed, complexity or amount of information said;
- Not paying attention in conversations;
- Not understanding what is said;
- Difficulty remembering instructions given.
Expressive Skills
Expressive skills are the skills required to form coherent sentences,
find the right words, and then produce the appropriate sounds.
The ability to use verbal or written skills to express oneself may
appear unaffected, but often there are subtle problems that emerge over
time. Often communication tests during rehabilitation will not detect
problems as these formal testing situations will not trigger many of
these subtle issues. Some of these can include:
- Non-stop talking, rambling explanations or very rapid speech
- Difficulty remembering particular words
- Incorrect use of language
- Talking about/interrupting about unrelated topics
- Not observing the usual norms and customs in social situations
- Making up stories
- Minimal responses when detail is required in an answer
- Difficulty with abstract skills in understanding humour, puns, sarcasm and metaphors
- Hyperverbal or rapid, non-stop talking
- Poor spelling and difficulty in learning new words
- Saying the same thing over and over (
Perseveration)
- Trouble with writing long sentences.
Anomia – Trouble with Finding Words
Some people with a brain injury will know the word they want to say but
just can’t come up with it. This is called “anomia,” which means “can’t
name”. Everyone has an occasional anomia; those with a brain injury may
have it frequently. It can be particularly frustrating if you are
dealing with people all day long, and can lead to poor self esteem.
A variation on this problem is saying the wrong word. Instead of
saying, “pass me the spoon”, you might say “pass me the noon.” Or,
instead of using a similar sounding word, you may use an entirely wrong
word. Instead of “pass me the spoon,” you may say, “pass me the car.”
A speech/language pathologist is a professional who commonly works
with this type of problem. This person can teach you techniques to
decrease this problem. For example, you can use a technique called
“circumlocution.” Basically, you “talk around” the word. If you can’t
come up with the word “telephone,” you might say “you dial it, you can
call people.” People eventually get what you were trying to say.
Another technique that people sometimes use is to go through the
alphabet and try to get the first letter of the word. Or you can
visualise spelling the word—picture a blackboard and try to “see”
someone writing the word on the blackboard. Then read the word off the
blackboard.
Dysarthria results in slow, slurred, and difficult to understand
speech as the areas of the brain that control the muscles of the speech
mechanism are damaged. A speech pathologist may help with strengthening
muscles, increasing movement of mouth and tongue, breathing exercises
and slower rate of speech. In extreme cases alternative means of
communicating may be looked at.
A person with dysarthria should concentrate on slow clear speech
with frequent pauses. It may be an idea to commence a topic with a
single word first, and to check frequently that the other person is
understanding you. Conversations should be finished as you become tired
as speech will deteriorate quickly with fatigue.
This is a condition in which strength and coordination of the speech
muscles are unaffected but the individual experiences difficulty saying
words correctly in a consistent way. For example, someone may
repeatedly stumble on the word “yesterday” when asked to repeat it, but
then be able to say it in a statement such as, “I tried to say it
yesterday.”
The type of treatment depends on the severity of apraxia. In mild
cases, therapy may start by saying individual sounds and contrasting
them and thinking about how the lips and tongue should be placed.
Sometimes the timing of rhythm of speech to tapping or clapping helps
to speak more clearly. Contrastive stress drills use the natural rhythm
of speech to increase intelligibility. In this exercise, the same
sentence is repeated with a different stress patterns, changing the
meaning of the sentence. Individuals with mild apraxia learn strategies
they can use to produce words which give them trouble. For very severe
apraxia, alternative and augmentative systems, such as physical
communication via gestures and facial expressions or written
communication using a board, pre-printed cards or a notebook, are often
employed.
Confabulation
Confabulation is a memory disorder that may occur in patients who
have sustained damage to both the basal forebrain and the frontal
lobes. Confabulation is defined as the spontaneous production of false
memories – either memories for events which never occurred, or memories
of actual events which are displaced in space or time. These memories
may be elaborate and detailed. Some may be obviously bizarre, such as a
memory of a ride in an alien spaceship; others are quite mundane, such
as a memory of having eggs for breakfast, so that only a close family
member can confirm that the memory is in fact false.
It is important to stress that confabulators are not lying. They are
not deliberately trying to mislead. In fact, the patients are generally
quite unaware that their memories are inaccurate, and they may argue
strenuously that they have been telling the truth.
Pressure of Speech
Pressure of speech is a tendency to speak rapidly and frenziedly, as if
motivated by an urgency not apparent to the listener. The speech
produced, sometimes called pressured speech, is difficult to interrupt
and may be too fast or too tangential for the listener to
understand--it is an example of cluttered speech.
It is a hallmark of mania and is often seen in bipolar people during
manic periods, and is also seen in people suffering from severe
anxiety.
Neologisms
Neologisms are newly coined words or phrases that may or may not express a clear idea.
They are most often associated with people suffering a psychotic
illness like schizophrenia but are also seen in people with Aphasia.
Cognitive Problems
In some cases the person may not appear to have communication
difficulties until they are in stressful situations such as returning
to work or study. These cognitive problems will usually stem from
inability to maintain attention, difficulty with abstract language,
poor organisation of language and a slower rate of processing
information.
How Professionals Can Help
Following a brain injury, these cognitive issues can make it harder
to learn and apply knowledge to specific situations. A speech language
pathologist can assess and treat communication problems, and provide
advice to rehabilitation teams. They can help the individual with a
brain injury to cope in given social situations, using compensatory
strategies and treatment to help the individual be more competent in
social situations. Often the individual can learn to compensate for a
disability by learning a new and different skill or by using assistive
technology such as a hearing aid or augmentative communication device
(e.g. speech synthesisers or communication boards).
How Families and Friends can Help
Families, co-workers, teachers and friends can play an important
role in helping a person improve communication skills or learn new
compensatory strategies, particularly when they work with the speech
therapist to provide consistent support in the strategies being taught.
Family members should ask questions and expect to be involved in the
process of rehabilitation. Not only will this greatly improve the
prognosis for the person with the brain injury, by increasing the
amount of rehabilitation which will be offered, but can greatly assist
the family to understand the injury and reassure the person with the
injury that they are being supported.
Approaches to use when communicating with someone with acquired brain injury and a communication disorder.
- Acknowledge the injury and be supportive;
- Allow people to take extra time to finish their sentence or to find the word;
- Prompt the person to evaluate their own speech and be aware of issues;
- Speak clearly and simply when there is a receptive communication deficit;
- Work with the person to find out what techniques assist them to communicate;
Approaches to avoid
- False reassurance;
- Finishing sentences for people who lose track of what they were saying or who take longer than you are used to;
- Speaking excessively loudly or slowly;
- Using jargon or lengthy explanations that the individual cannot understand or follow.
General considerations for communication
- Try to avoid too many distractions;
- Find out what techniques or aids the person may benefit from;
- Use active listening:
- Meaningful eye contact and supportive body language
- Reflection of feeling e.g. “This sounds really distressing for you”
- Reflection of content e.g. “It sounds like you want is ...”
- Use paraphrasing and summarising to ensure understanding;
- Use verbal tracking to remind people of previous comments or topics of conversation;
- Use redirection to assist people who are overly talkative or easily distracted.
Further information:
- For a more in-depth look at the processes behind
communication disorders, see the Fact Sheet “Speech Deficits and Speech
Language Pathologists” at www.braininjury.org.au .
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