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Study on Language Rehabilitation for Aphasia. | LitMetric

Study on Language Rehabilitation for Aphasia.

Chin Med J (Engl)

Rehabilitation Medicine Center, Chinese People's Liberation Army General Hospital, Beijing 100853, China.

Published: June 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The objective of the research is to update clinical recommendations for language rehabilitation in people with aphasia through a systematic review of relevant literature from 1999 to 2015.
  • The study selected 44 articles focusing on evidence-based rehabilitation practices, excluding non-English studies and unrelated ones.
  • Current findings emphasize a combination of clinicians' experience and scientific evidence to support effective treatment protocols for aphasia, primarily targeting cognitive language recovery after brain injuries.

Article Abstract

Objective: The aim is to update our clinical recommendations for evidence-based language rehabilitation of people with aphasia, based on a systematic review of the literature from 1999 to 2015.

Data Sources: Articles referred to in this systematic review of the Medline and PubMed published in English language literatures were from 1998 to 2015. The terms used in the literature searches were aphasia and evidenced-based.

Study Selection: The task force initially identified citations for 51 published articles. Of the 51 articles, 44 studies were selected after further detailed review. Six articles, which were not written in English, and one study related to laryngectomy rehabilitation interventions, were excluded from the study. This study referred to all the important and English literature in full.

Results: Aphasia is the linguistic disability, which usually results from injuries to the dominant hemisphere of the brain. The rehabilitation of aphasia is until in the process of being debated and researched. Evidence-based medicine (EBM), EBM based on the clinical evidence, promotes the practice of combining the clinicians' first-hand experience and the existing objective and scientific evidence encouraging making decisions based on both empirical evidence and the scientific evidence. Currently, EBM is being gradually implemented in the clinical practice as the aim of the development of modern medicine.

Conclusions: At present, the research for the aphasia rehabilitation mainly focuses on the cognitive language rehabilitation and the intensive treatment and the precise treatment, etc. There is now sufficient information to support evidence-based protocols and implement empirically-supported treatments for linguistic disability after traumatic brain injury and stroke, which can be used to develop linguistic rehabilitation guidelines for patients with aphasia.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5463481PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0366-6999.207465DOI Listing

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