Dysarthria
Dysarthria
Dysarthria
Apraxia of Speech
1. Description - Apraxia is a problem in assembling the appropriate sequence of
movements for speech production or the executing the appropriate serial
ordering of sounds for speech. Primary disorder is an inability to program
articulatory movements. Since these problems cannot be explained by
significant slowness, weakness, restricted range of movement or incoordination
of the articulators, apraxia is not dysarthria and no significant muscle
involvement exists. Prosodic alterations may be associated with the articulatory
problem, perhaps in compensation for it.
2. Localization - Apraxia results from a unilateral, left hemisphere lesion
involving the third frontal convolution, Broca's area. There is a possibility of
apraxia following more posterior, probably parietal lesions.
3. Speech Characteristics
1. Articulation Process
1. Common characteristic is the patient's groping to find the correct
articulatory postures and sequences.
2. Facial grimaces, moments of silence, and phonated movements of
articulators are common occurrences.
3. Consonant phonemes are involved more often than vowel
phonemes
4. Articulation errors are inconsistent and highly variable, not
referable to specific muscle dysfunction
5. Articulatory errors are primarily substitutions, additions,
repetitions, and prolongations-essentially complications of the act
of articulation.
2. Prosody Process
1. Durational relationships of vowels and consonants are distorted
2. Rate of production is slow
3. Alterations of the intonation
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