How do you communicate with dysphagia?
Aphasia Communication Tips
- Make sure you have the person’s attention before you start.
- Minimize or eliminate background noise (TV, radio, other people).
- Keep your own voice at a normal level, unless the person has indicated otherwise.
- Keep communication simple, but adult.
- Give them time to speak.
How does an SLP treat dysphagia?
SLPs use instrumental techniques to evaluate oral, pharyngeal, laryngeal, upper esophageal, and respiratory function as they apply to normal and abnormal swallowing. Instrumental procedures are also used to determine appropriateness and effectiveness of treatment strategies.
How does dysphasia affect communication?
Dysphasia, also called aphasia, is a language disorder. It affects how you speak and understand language. People with dysphasia might have trouble putting the right words together in a sentence, understanding what others say, reading, and writing.
How do you communicate with Wernicke’s aphasia?
6 Strategies to Help Comprehension for Wernicke’s aphasia
- Use gestures when you speak.
- Write down key words while speaking.
- Talk about things that are relevant to “right now”.
- Don’t shout if the person isn’t hard-of-hearing.
- Slow your speech a little when talking.
- Be close enough to maintain eye contact.
What is pharyngeal pouch?
A pharyngeal pouch, also known as Zenker’s diverticulum, occurs when part of the pharyngeal lining herniates through the muscles of the pharyngeal wall. This occurs mainly in older people. Presenting symptoms include dysphagia, regurgitation of undigested food, halitosis, hoarseness, and chronic cough.
What is pharyngeal phase dysphagia?
Belching Disorders. Cricopharyngeal Bar. Diffuse Esophageal Spasm (DES) Dysphagia. Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE)
What causes someone to talk gibberish?
Brain damage caused by a severe head injury, a tumor, an infection or a degenerative process also can cause aphasia. In these cases, the aphasia usually occurs with other types of cognitive problems, such as memory problems or confusion.