Dysarthria Type
Cranial Nerves
Dx/Tx
Etiologies
Neuroanatomy
100

Which type of dysarthria occurs from damage to the cerebellum?

Ataxic

100

True or False: Bilateral facial nerve damage will negatively affect a person's QoL more than unilateral facial nerve damage.

True

100

Dysarthria results in difficulty at the level of speech, language, or cognition?

Speech

100

What is the lesion site that causes flaccid dysarthria?

Lower motor neurons

100

Lower motor neurons live in the _____________ and upper motor neurons live in the _____________.

LMN = PNS

UMN = CNS

200

True or False: Flaccidity is characterized by hypotonia and resistance to movement.

False -- flaccidity is characterized by hypotonia and weakness

200

The mandible may deviate toward the weaker side during an OME if what cranial nerve is damaged?

Trigeminal

200

Name one type of restorative therapy approach.

Strengthening (CPAP, exercises), relaxing, stretching

200

What is the lesion site that causes spastic dysarthria?

Bilateral upper motor neurons

200

Name two differences between apraxia and dysarthria

AOS = inconsistent errors, more difficulty with phonetically complex words, islands of intact speech, normal OME

Dysarthria = consistent errors, same level of difficulty with all types of words, asymmetrical/abnormal OME

300

Which two types of dysarthria occur from damage to the basal ganglia?

Hypokinetic and hyperkinetic

300

Unilateral damage to the hypoglossal nerve will be revealed during an OME of which articulator?

Tongue

300

Give an example of a compensatory strategy for dysarthria

AAC, speech specific tasks, palatal lift/rib binder

300

True or False: A lesion in the UMN causes damage to the indirect activation pathway only.

False -- it causes damage to both the indirect activation pathway and the direct activation pathway

300

Name two differences between UMN lesion and LMN lesion presentation

UMN = hypertonia, hyperreflexia, spasticity

LMN = hypotonia, hyporeflexia, flaccidity

400

Spasticity = ______tonia + _______reflexia

Hyper, hyper

400

Name 3 components of the vagus nerve.

Recurrent laryngeal nerve

Superior Laryngeal nerve: Intrinsic/extrinsic

Pharyngeal plexus

400

True or False: Medical management of the dysarthrias is never a viable option.

False

400

The difference between a lesion that causes unilateral upper motor neuron dysarthria and spastic dysarthria is?

UUMN = unilateral UMN damage

Spastic = bilateral UMN damage

400

True or False: A lesion in the UMN will affect all structures innervated below it.

True

500

Generate a definition of the term dysarthria in laymen's terms.

Varied responses

500

Cranial nerve damage after decussation will cause ipsilateral or contralateral damage?

Ipsilateral damage
500

Name 3 things you would look for/assess during an oral motor exam to detect dysarthria.

Varied..

500

Name 3 medical diagnoses that may cause dysarthria

CVA, tumor, toxins, TBI, infection...

500

Where do most cranial nerves decussate?

Medulla

M
e
n
u