Introduction to Neurogenic Communication Disorders, 6e provides students and beginning clinicians with a basic understanding of neurogenic communication disorders, the individuals who have these disorders, and how these disorders are measured and treated. This text gives the reader the tools needed to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients with neurogenic communication disorders. These tools, in addition to clinical training and experience, will help the student obtain clinical competency.
- Clinically relevant and practical information on many neurogenic communication disorders is provided in one book, making it more useful and eliminating the need for several different volumes.
- Many clinical examples, vignettes, and patient transcripts provide practical information and prepare readers for clinical practice.
- Critical thinking exercises, key concepts, and clinically relevant sidebars serve as valuable study tools.
- Topics such as aphasia, dementia, dysarthria, right hemisphere syndrome and traumatic brain injuries are discussed in detail, giving the reader an excellent introduction to and understanding of neurogenic communication disorders.
- The author is highly regarded and widely published in the field, with more than 20 years of teaching courses in the area of neurogenic communication disorders.
New material on the effects of brain injury, including consequent communicative and cognitive impairments on patients and the effect on their familiesClinically relevant sidebars provide additional facts and information, giving the reader a deeper understanding of the materialCritical thinking exercises and answers for each chapter provide the reader with an opportunity to apply what they learn to clinical situationsClinical vignettes provide examples of patients who were evaluated and treatedKey concepts separate the chapters into sections with easy-to-understand summariesCompletely updated, the sixth edition reflects current changes in clinical and technical areas
Robert H. Brookshire, PhD, CCC/SP, Director, Speech Pathology Section, Neurology Service, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center