| 1. | The stroke caused expressive aphasia, which affected his ability to produce language.
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| 2. | In the late 19th century, Paul Broca studied patients with expressive aphasia.
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| 3. | For something more related to neurology, perhaps some kind of expressive aphasia?
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| 4. | Receptive aphasia, unlike expressive aphasia often occurs without any motor deficits.
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| 5. | Expressive aphasia limits the ability to convey thoughts through the use of speech, language or writing.
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| 6. | Therapy for Expressive Aphasia ( nonfluent ) is beneficial, even for patients with severe nonfluent aphasia.
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| 7. | Expressive aphasia can also be caused by trauma to the brain, tumor, cerebral hemorrhage by extradural hematoma.
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| 8. | With some recovery, impairment presentation may progress into expressive aphasia ( most commonly ) or receptive aphasia.
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| 9. | Severity of expressive aphasia varies among patients.
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| 10. | Due to frustration from the inability to express themselves, sufferers of expressive aphasia can become clinically depressed.
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