Normal v. Abnormal
Dysarthria v. Apraxia
CNS, UMN, LMN
Disease and Injury
Assessing Motor Speech
100

What should we know about normal speech before diagnosing atypical speech? 

Age-related changes, gender differences (male v. female), variations in style (personality, speaking role, emotional style)
100

Define Dysarthria. 

A neurological motor speech impairment characterized by slow, weak, uncoordinated movement of the speech musculature. 

100

Overview of the CNS 

Composed of the brain and spinal cord. 

12 cranial nerves in the brain 

31 pairs of spinal nerves in spinal cord - acts as a communication system between the brain and the peripheral nerves. 


100

What is the medical terminology to describe symptoms and the time increment associated with it? 

Acute - within minutes

Subacute - within days 

Chronic - within months

100

When assessing this cranial nerve, a clinician looks for weakness, asymmetry, and incoordination of jaw movement, evaluates sequential motion rates with /p p p/ and /m m m/, and conducts sensory testing of the face.

Trigeminal (V)

200

How prevalent are motor speech disorders? 

The population is uncertain. It is estimated that 60% of individuals who suffer a stroke experience speech/language impairment. Dysarthria is most often associated with neurological conditions. 

200

Define Apraxia 

It is caused by damage to the parts of the brain related to executing speech. 

200

These specialized brain cells are located in the spinal cord and brain and are responsible for transmitting movement-related signals. They are divided into upper and lower subtypes.

Motor Neurons 

200

What is the medical terminology used to describe the disease and a brief description for each? 

  • Transient - symptoms resolved completely after onset
  • Improving - when severity is reduced but symptoms are not resolved
  • Progressive -  when symptoms continue to progress
  • Exacerbating - remitting - when symptoms develop, then resolve, and then worsen
  • Stationary (chronic) - when symptoms remain unchanged for an extended time
200

This cranial nerve is evaluated by assessing lip and facial movements with non-speech tasks such as smiling, frowning, and puffing air into the cheeks. It is also tested using /papapa/ to assess articulatory precision. 

Facial (VII)
300

What is a typical motor speech process?

A person's ability to combine the process of speech-motor planning, programming, and neuromuscular execution. 

300

What is the big difference between these two disorders? 

Apraxia occurs due to motor planning. Dysarthria occurs due to muscle weakness

300

These motor neurons originate in the brain and travel downward to form synapses with lower motor neurons.

The upper motor neurons

300

What are the broad ideological categories that can result in a motor speech disorder? 

Degenerative disease, inflammatory disease, toxic, neoplastic disease, traumatic injuries. 

300

These three cranial nerves contribute to the integrity of pharyngeal, palatal, and laryngeal musculature, and their dysfunction may present with dysphagia, drooling, and abnormal palatal movement.

Glossopharyngeal (IX), Vagus (X), and Spinal Accessory (XI)

400
What is a simple way to describe the neurologic breakdown of motor speech? 

The nervous system becomes disordered. These changes in speech may indicate the presence of neurologic disease. 

400

What kinds of medical conditions can cause Dysarthria? 

  • Stroke 
  • Brain injury 
  • Tumors  
  • Cerebral Palsy 
  • Parkinson's disease 
  • Lou Gehrig's Disease 
  • Huntington's Disease
  • Multiple Sclerosis  
  • Myasthenia Gravis
  • Medications 
400

The cell bodies of these motor neurons are located in the gray matter of the spinal cord and brainstem, where they form synapses with muscles in the body.

The lower motor neurons


400

What is a Traumatic Brain Injury? Describe the type of damage that could occur. 

When the head strikes a fixed object. There is the coup injury, which occurs at the point of impact, and the counter-coup, which occurs on the opposite side. 


Damage may occur at the point of impact (coup) or on the opposite side of impact (counter-coup). 

400

This nerve is assessed by checking tongue atrophy, fasciculations, and involuntary movements. It is further tested through alternating and sequential motion rates such as /pataka/ and /t t t/.

Hypoglossal (XII)

500

What are Motor Speech Disorders?

Speech disorders resulting from neurologic impairment affecting the motor planning, programming, neuromuscular control, and execution of speech. 

500

Signs and Symptoms of Apraxia

Knowing the word you want to say, but the production is different 

Made up words 

Sound distortions 

Inconsistent Errors 

Fluency can be impacted - irregular stress, pace, tone

500

Neurons react to neurological diseases and disorders in different ways, sometimes showing structural changes that reflect specific damage. 

Pathologic reactions  

500

What is the prognosis for a TBI? 

Worse with the severity of injury. 

Around 90% of TBI's are deemed "mild" and do not cause permanent, long-term disability, BUT all types of severity for a TBI could cause significant, long-lasting disability. 

Permanent disability is thought to occur in 10% of mild injuries, 66% of moderate injuries, and 100% of severe injuries.

500

This evaluation includes observing posture, and breathing patterns, and measuring sustained phonation and forced vital lung capacity to compare patient values to age and gender norms.

Respiration tasks for speech assessment

M
e
n
u