Learning to Speak Again After Brain Injury: How to Recover
A traumatic brain injury can affect your speech and language skills in various ways. For example, some individuals lose control of the muscles that make up the mouth while others may struggle to remember words. Luckily, many people learn to speak again after brain injury by working with a speech-language pathologist and practicing targeted exercises.
How Brain Injury Affects Speech
Speech and language problems are just one of the many possible effects of traumatic brain injury.
If you have suffered a brain injury and have trouble speaking and forming words, this is most likely because your injury caused damage to the language centers of the brain. These are located in the dominant hemisphere, which for most people, is the left side of the brain.
There are 3 types of speech and language disorders you may experience after a brain injury: dysarthria, apraxia of speech, and aphasia.
Dysarthria refers to when the muscles used for speech are weakened or paralyzed, leading to slurred or mumbled speech. This is caused by damage to the part of the brain responsible for motor control of the muscles around your mouth such as the tongue.
Apraxia of speech describes when a person has trouble initiating and carrying out the movement patterns necessary to say words correctly, due to impaired coordination stemming from the brain. With apraxia, the muscles are not affected like they are with dysarthria. Instead, the brain pathways involved in planning the movements used in producing speech are affected.
Aphasia describes when a person has difficulty speaking fluently and/or understanding what others are saying. It differs from apraxia in that it’s not a problem with the movement patterns required to create speech; rather, it is more specific to cognitively retrieving and comprehending words. Individuals with aphasia may also struggle with reading and writing.
Now that you understand how speech can be affected following a brain injury, let’s discuss how the brain can recover speech and language skills.
Is it Possible to Regain Speech After Brain Injury?


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