Aphasia
Aphasia, loss of speech and language skills, affects many people after a stroke. Many patients get 12 hours of therapy, but ten times that could make all the difference.
This week's finalist in the All in the Mind Awards is Sian who's been nominated by her mother Myra who cannot believe how much support she has given her during a manic episode and her diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Even when Myra threatened to bite Sian, she still kept calm and understood that it was her illness which was affecting her behaviour. When she let her mum look after her beloved granddaughters, it helped Myra's confidence to grow. One of the Awards judges Maddie Leslay - who plays Chelsea in the Archers - found Myra and Sian's story really inspiring and full of unconditional love.
Losing language and communication skills after a stroke can be isolating - and some patients are told that there is a "window" when rehabilitation therapy needs to happen for it to work. Prof Alex Leff from the UCL Institute of Neurology says the brain's plasticity doesn't disappear completely as we age - and some of the participants in his studies saw big improvements many years after their strokes. Prof Jenny Crinnion explains how speech therapists prompt people experiencing "tip of the tongue" difficulties with finding words during the intensive speech and language therapy.
Studio guest Mathijs Lucassen from the Open University samples crisps from red, white and blue bowls to see which are the tastiest and most salty, replicating a study which hopes to help expand the food choices of picky eaters.
Produced in partnership with The Open University
Last on
More episodes
Clip
-
"She's given her the boost to carry on building her life."
Duration: 00:30
Broadcasts
- Tue 2 May 2023 21:00大象传媒 Radio 4
- Wed 3 May 2023 15:30大象传媒 Radio 4
Podcast
-
All in the Mind
The show with the latest evidence on psychology, mental health and neuroscience.