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  2. In its most mild form, children may have difficulties finding words. However, they can make their needs and wants known. In the most severe forms, children are unable to understand anything. They cannot express any of their needs. There are many types of aphasia. They are named based on which symptoms a child has. The main types include:

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  3. Aphasia affects everyone differently, but most people will have difficulty expressing themselves or understanding things they hear or read. If aphasia has been caused by a sudden brain injury, such as a stroke or severe head injury, symptoms usually develop straight after the injury.

  4. www.nhs.uk › conditions › aphasiaAphasia - NHS

    Symptoms. Treatment. Aphasia is when a person has difficulty with their language or speech. It's usually caused by damage to the left side of the brain (for example, after a stroke). Symptoms of aphasia. People with aphasia often have trouble with the 4 main ways people understand and use language. These are: reading. listening. speaking.

  5. Aphasia is an acquired language disorder. It is a change in the way your child uses or processes language after a medical incident or injury. Aphasia can make it hard for your child to understand what others say, what they read, or show their full knowledge of something.

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    Language disorders after brain injury arecommonly referred to as aphasia. Aphasia can affect allaspects of a child's language such as thinking of the rightword, using the correct grammar when they talk or write and understanding what they hear or read. The most common cause of aphasia isstroke. Traumatic brain injury, brain tumours and somediseases...

    A speech pathologist can assess if your child child ishaving language difficulties or other difficultieswith speech and language development. If possible, it is mosthelpful for your child to see a paediatric speech pathologist experienced inlooking after children with brain injury. Your local braininjury service will usually have a speech pathologi...

    A speech pathologist does a formal languageassessment to identify the specific problems and strengths yourchild may have. Input from a neuropsychologist can alsohelp identify any other cognitive problems that can affectlanguage. To start with, some children may need one-on-onetherapy to manage and develop specificlanguage skills. School based langu...

    Aphasia is a language disorder that is a result of damageto the specific language centres of the brain.
    The severity of the problem depends on the amount andlocation of the damage to the brain.
    A speech pathologist can diagnose language disordersand help with developing strategies to help yourchild.
    The Royal Children's Hospital Paediatric Rehabilitation Service T: (03) 9345 9300 E: rehab.service@rch.org.au
    KidsHealth Info series of fact sheetslistedunder 'Brain injury'
  6. Jun 11, 2022 · Aphasia is a disorder that affects how you communicate. It can impact your speech, as well as the way you write and understand both spoken and written language. Aphasia usually happens suddenly after a stroke or a head injury.

  7. Nov 16, 2022 · Explaining Aphasia to Children. In 3 minutes and 18 seconds, Melissa Saylor’s young son explains his mother’s aphasia. Using simple words and clear explanations, he does what some adults find difficult, taking a complicated subject and making it easy to understand.

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