TY - JOUR
T1 - Fluent Aphasia in Children
T2 - Definition and Natural History
AU - Klein, Susan K.
AU - Masur, David
AU - Farber, Karen
AU - Shinnar, Shlomo
AU - Rapin, Isabelle
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2016 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1992/1
Y1 - 1992/1
N2 - We compared the course of a preschool child we followed for 4 years with published reports of 24 children with fluent aphasia. Our patient spoke fluently within 3 weeks of the injury. She was severely anomic and made many semantic paraphasic errors. Unlike other children with fluent aphasia, her prosody of speech was impaired initially, and her spontaneous language was dominated by stock phrases. Residual deficits include chronic impairment of auditory comprehension, repetition, and word retrieval. She has more disfluencies in spontaneous speech 4 years after her head injury than acutely. School achievement in reading and mathematics remains below age level. Attention to the timing of recovery of fluent speech and to the characteristics of receptive and expressive language over time will permit more accurate description of fluent aphasia in childhood. (J Child Neurol 1992;7:50-59).
AB - We compared the course of a preschool child we followed for 4 years with published reports of 24 children with fluent aphasia. Our patient spoke fluently within 3 weeks of the injury. She was severely anomic and made many semantic paraphasic errors. Unlike other children with fluent aphasia, her prosody of speech was impaired initially, and her spontaneous language was dominated by stock phrases. Residual deficits include chronic impairment of auditory comprehension, repetition, and word retrieval. She has more disfluencies in spontaneous speech 4 years after her head injury than acutely. School achievement in reading and mathematics remains below age level. Attention to the timing of recovery of fluent speech and to the characteristics of receptive and expressive language over time will permit more accurate description of fluent aphasia in childhood. (J Child Neurol 1992;7:50-59).
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U2 - 10.1177/088307389200700109
DO - 10.1177/088307389200700109
M3 - Article
C2 - 1372626
AN - SCOPUS:0026585455
SN - 0883-0738
VL - 7
SP - 50
EP - 59
JO - Journal of Child Neurology
JF - Journal of Child Neurology
IS - 1
ER -