Adult

Aphasia

Aphasia is an acquired language disorder caused by brain injury, most commonly stroke, affecting expression, comprehension, reading, and writing in varying combinations.

What Aphasia is

Aphasia is an acquired language disorder caused by damage to the language-dominant hemisphere of the brain — most commonly the left hemisphere following ischaemic or haemorrhagic stroke. It affects production and comprehension of spoken and written language in combinations that traditionally map onto classical syndromes (Broca's, Wernicke's, conduction, transcortical, global) though contemporary practice increasingly treats aphasia as a continuum rather than a discrete taxonomy. Aphasia is distinct from dysarthria and apraxia of speech, which are motor rather than linguistic disorders, and from cognitive-communication disorders, which reflect generalised brain injury rather than focal language system damage.

Prevalence

About 180,000 Americans acquire aphasia each year, and the total population living with aphasia is estimated at 2 million — approximately 1 in 250 adults (National Aphasia Association 2023).

Diagnostic criteria and defining features

  • Acquired impairment of language (expression, comprehension, reading, or writing)
  • Attributable to focal brain damage, most commonly left middle cerebral artery distribution stroke
  • Language impairment disproportionate to generalised cognitive impairment
  • Not explained by dysarthria, apraxia, or sensory deficit alone
  • Documented through standardised aphasia battery (e.g., WAB, BDAE, CAT)

Criteria summarised from DSM-5-TR, ICD-11, and ASHA practice guidance. Always cross-reference against the diagnostic manual of record before using in a report.

Clinical presentation

The clinical face of aphasia depends on lesion location. Broca's-type (non-fluent) aphasia presents as effortful, halting, telegraphic speech with relatively preserved comprehension and often co-occurring apraxia. Wernicke's-type (fluent) aphasia presents as fluent but empty or paraphasic speech with impaired comprehension — the patient sounds conversational but the content is circular and often unintelligible. Global aphasia affects both domains severely. In outpatient clinics, chronic aphasia profiles are rarely clean versions of the textbook syndromes — most patients show mixed presentations that evolve with recovery, treatment, and compensatory strategies. Communication partners, environment, and psychosocial support are as important to long-term outcomes as the underlying linguistic impairment.

The husband who greets you with "how do you do, the ship, the ship" and a warm smile is telling you that conversation is still possible — the lexical retrieval is impaired but the social machinery is intact. Match your therapy targets to that social machinery.
Social machinery before syntax

How language sample analysis contributes

Language sampling in aphasia is the workhorse assessment for documenting functional communication change over time. Collect a connected-speech sample using a standardised picture description (Cookie Theft) or personal narrative, transcribe verbatim, and compute content units, words per minute, correct information units per minute (Nicholas & Brookshire 1993), and mean length of utterance. Repeat samples at admission, discharge, and follow-up to quantify spontaneous recovery and treatment response. A language sample captures functional output in a way that confrontation naming and repetition tasks cannot.

Free tools for Aphasia

MLU Calculator

Paste a language sample and get Mean Length of Utterance in morphemes and words, total utterances, total morphemes, and the matching Brown's stage. Implements Brown (1973) morpheme counting rules and runs entirely in your browser.

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Lexical Diversity Calculator

Paste a language sample and get type-token ratio (TTR), number of different words in the first 100 tokens (NDW-100, Miller 1981), and NDW per 50 utterances (NDW-50, SUGAR). Implements the standard SALT/SUGAR tokenisation rules and runs entirely in your browser.

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Conversation Turn Analyzer

Free interactive conversation turn analyzer for school-based and clinic speech-language pathologists analysing child-partner dialogue transcripts. Paste a transcript with speaker tags (e.g. C: and P:) and mark each child turn as [on] or [off] for topic maintenance. The analyzer returns turns per speaker, average turn length, longest / shortest turn, total speaker-to-speaker turn switches, the child topic-maintenance ratio, a four-tier topic-maintenance classification (poor, emerging, adequate, strong), and a three-tier turn-balance classification (partner-dominant, balanced, child-dominant) in under five minutes. Tier thresholds are derived from Fey (1986), Brinton & Fujiki (1989), Mentis & Prutting (1991), and Timler (2008). Built for school SLPs, clinic SLPs, autism-assessment teams, graduate SLP students, and paediatric language researchers screening pragmatic-discourse in children with DLD, ASD, ADHD, and TBI. Mobile-friendly, client-side, no sign-up.

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Reading Grade Level Analyzer

Free interactive reading grade level analyzer for speech-language pathologists, school psychologists, audiologists, and rehabilitation clinicians. Paste a clinical report, parent handout, IEP summary, or informed-consent document and get Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level, SMOG, Gunning Fog, Flesch Reading Ease, average sentence length, and a consensus grade classified against the AMA / NIH / CDC parent-readability target of grade 6 or below. Built for SLP report writing, IEP documentation, school and medical discharge planning, informed-consent review, and graduate clinical-writing training. Mobile-friendly, client-side, no sign-up.

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References

  1. Damasio, A. R. (1992). Aphasia. New England Journal of Medicine, 326(8), 531–539.
  2. Nicholas, L. E., & Brookshire, R. H. (1993). A system for quantifying the informativeness and efficiency of the connected speech of adults with aphasia. JSHR, 36(2), 338–350.
  3. Kertesz, A. (2007). Western Aphasia Battery–Revised. Pearson.