Speech Characteristics of Dysarthria
Assessment of Dysarthria by Subsystem
Formal/Informal Assessment
&

Dysarthria Treatment
Dysarthria Treatment
100

Slurred speech, harsh vocal quality or tremor, prolonged phonemes and intervals btwn words/syllables, exaggerated or paradoxical respiration, excess/equal stress

What is ataxic dysarthria?

Lesion site: cerebellum

Neuromotor basis: incoordination

Common Etiologies: stroke, degenerative diseases, toxic conditions, trauma, demyelination (MS), tumors

100

Listen for rate at rest and during speech, both reading and conversation, look for rapid, shallow or effortful and irregularity of this subsystem and rate severity.

What is respiration?

100

Formal tool for quantifying single word & sentence intelligibility and speaking rate (test)

What is the Assessment of Intelligibility of Dysarthric Speech?

100

Treatment designed for hypokinetic dysarthria associated with Parkinson's.

Goals: Increase phonotory effort, vocal fold adduction, respiratory support

Simple instructions (Think loud)

What is LSVT?

good candidates:

mild-moderate PD

200

Phonatory: breathiness, short phrases, audible inspiration

Resonatory: Hypernasality, imprecise consonants, NAE, short phrases,

Phonatory-prosodic: harsh voice, monolooudness, monopitch

What is flaccid dysarthria?

Lesion: LMN pathways (cranial/spinal nerves) 

Neuromotor basis: Weakness/paralysis, diminished/absent reflexes, loss of muscle mass (atrophy)

Common Etiology: Surgical trauma (severed spinal cord, RLN from heart surgery); degenerative (ALS); peripheral nerve disorder via trauma, genetic disease, metabolic disorder, toxins, nutritional, carcinoma, immunologic disorders (Guillan Barre)

200

Observe hyper or hyponasality, nasal emission of this subsystem.

What is resonance?

200

Speech sample

Oral reading sample

Diodochokinetic rate

Oral Mech

What are the components of informal assessment of dysarthria?

200

Watch and listen (integral stimulation)

Teach phonetic placement

Teach self-monitoring skills

Exaggerate consonants (clear speech)

Minimal contrasts

Intelligibility drills

What are intervention strategies to work on articulation? 

300

Distorted vowels, monopitch, monoloudness, inappropriate silence, imprecise consonants.

What is hyperkinetic dysarthria?


Lesion: Basal Ganglia

Neuromotor basis: Excessive movement, slow (dystonia, athetosis, tardive dyskinesia), fast (no sustained postures: myoclonus, tics, chorea, balismus)

Etiology: Huntingtons, brainstem stroke, spasmodic dysphonia

300

Listen to sustained 'ah', take note of pitch and pitch breaks, diplophonia, variation in pitch and monotony of pitch, vocal tremors, vocal quality of this subsystem

What is phonation?

300

1. Respiration & Resonance

2. Phonation

3. Articulation and Prosody 

(Note: prosody can go also with 1 & 2)

What is the treatment hierarchy to treat dysarthria we learned in class?

300
Use a mirror to monitor nasal airflow and provide feedback

Modify pattern of speaking by increasing effort, using slow rate, overarticulating

Resistance treatement during speech

What are intervention strategies to address resonance?

Candidates: has VPI and can compensate

400

Excess muscle tone, slow tongue movement, drooling and swallowing difficulty, imprecise consonants, distorted vowels. Low pitch, harsh, pitch breaks, slow speaking

What is spastic dysarthria?

Bilateral damage to direct an dindirect activation pathways of CNS (UMN)

Weakness & spasticity

Progressive degenerative disease (MS/PLS) bilateral strokes, head injury, tumor, infection, CP

400

Screen with DDKs 

For in-depth look use standardized tests and check stimulability as you go

What is articulation?

400

Intervention strategy that can be used to build respiratory support for speech.

Best candidates are those with low to midlevel stimulability (poor response to initial training)

What is biofeedback?

400

Pacing Devices

Metronome or finger tapping to reduce pauses

What are methods to alter speech rate?

500

Fast rushes of speech, quiet voice, monoloudness

What is hypokinetic dysarthria?

basal ganglia

Reduce ROM, rigid, reduced moves and tremor

Parkinson's

500

Note rate of speech, phrase length, stress patterns and short rushes of speech

What is prosody?

500

Pacing with metronome

sniffing, blowing panting

practicing effective breathing patterns (quick inspirations, slow controlled exhalations)

Biofeedback to increase control of inhale and exhale

Inspiratory checking without speech

What are non-speech tasks to coordinate respiration?

Used for ataxic or hyperkinetic dysarthria

500
Use instruments such as Vispitch or Voice Analyst to target goals



What are methods to alter pitch?

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