Question
What causes sudden aphasia accompanied by tongue tremors in children? Are there past experiences of similar rescues? What kind of assistance is needed?
Answer
Sudden aphasia accompanied by tongue tremors in children may be caused by various factors and requires timely professional diagnosis and treatment. Here are some suggestions:
- Within about a week of the onset of the illness, when the condition is stable, start articulation training. Functional rehabilitation training includes articulation training, phrase training, conversation training, reading training, sentence repetition training, word recognition, naming of object names, command execution, and picture identification.
- For patients with complete aphasia, language rehabilitation training should start with teaching pronunciation, such as guiding the patient to produce a “ah” sound or whistle, followed by teaching common single words such as “eat”, “drink”, “good”, “go”, etc., and then let the patient read cards with words. Then gradually teach double syllable words, phrases, sentences, etc. Training should be combined with visual prompts, such as presenting food when saying “eat” or using picture recognition method to combine speaking and looking at pictures.
- For patients with incomplete motor aphasia who can say some single words or phrases or sentences but speak slowly and repetitively. These patients may have vocabulary deficiency, slow speech, repetitive language problems. These patients need patient teaching and repeated reading of stories to train language flexibility.
- For sensory aphasia patients,