A left cerebral vascular accident (CVA) can cause aphasia, dysarthria, and right side weakness while leaving awareness, judgment, and cognition intact but impairing new language learning and analytical skills. A right CVA may lead to left side weakness, visual field cuts, impaired judgment, and behavior changes like impulsiveness while sparing language functions.
A left cerebral vascular accident (CVA) can cause aphasia, dysarthria, and right side weakness while leaving awareness, judgment, and cognition intact but impairing new language learning and analytical skills. A right CVA may lead to left side weakness, visual field cuts, impaired judgment, and behavior changes like impulsiveness while sparing language functions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
A left cerebral vascular accident (CVA) can cause aphasia, dysarthria, and right side weakness while leaving awareness, judgment, and cognition intact but impairing new language learning and analytical skills. A right CVA may lead to left side weakness, visual field cuts, impaired judgment, and behavior changes like impulsiveness while sparing language functions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Left CVA Aphasia Dysarthria Right Homonyous hemianopsia Normal awareness Right side paresis Judgment intact Depression Slow & cautious Impaired analytical Deficit new language info Cognition Memory Deficit new spatial info Language Speech Sensation Perception Movement Behavior Intact Dysarthria Left Homonyous hemianopsia Unilateral neglect Left side paresis Judgment impaired Denial Impulsive behavior Right CVA