A stroke can disrupt various aspects of life, and communication is often a crucial area that requires rehabilitation. Losing the ability to speak clearly or fluently can be incredibly frustrating.
Many people refer to a stroke as the brain’s equivalent of a heart attack. A stroke occurs when there’s an interruption or ...
As Stroke Awareness Month continues, a Tulsa speech therapist is shedding light on the recovery process and the critical role speech-language pathologists play in post-stroke care. Speech-language ...
Stroke recovery represents one of the most challenging yet hopeful journeys in medicine. While the brain damage from a stroke cannot be reversed, the remarkable ability of the human brain to rewire ...
Brain implants for speech, neurological effects of COVID-19, and motor recovery after stroke are among the topics that researchers from UC San Francisco (UCSF) will be presenting at this year’s annual ...
Powerful magnetic fields might be able to help stroke patients regain their speech ability Magnetic stimulation of the brain combined with intensive speech therapy helped patients recover their speech ...
Singing-based group rehabilitation can support communication and speech production in stroke survivors who have difficulty comprehending or producing language (aphasia). Caregivers also benefited from ...
White matter integrity in the right hemisphere may help to predict speech fluency recovery following a stroke, research indicates. The results show that post-stroke patients with aphasia who performed ...
You may be familiar with the common signs and symptoms of a stroke: loss of vision, drooping face, weak limbs, and slurred speech. But what happens during the recovery phase, once a patient has spent ...