Dysarthria
Dysphagia
Anatomy
Syndromes
Fluency
100

Which of the following is a common articulation error type a person with dysarthria might do?

A. Distortions

B. Substitutions

C. Omissions

D. Additions

What are distortions?

100

Which of the following is NOT a swallowing maneuver-motor with swallow?

A. Breath-Holding Techniques

B. Mendelsohn Maneuver

C. Effortful Swallow

D. EMST

What is EMST?

100

This is responsible for balance, coordination, and posture. It is also related to cognition, speech, and language.

A. Brainstem

B. Cerebrum

C. Cerebellum

D. Amygdala

What is the cerebellum?

100
A person with this syndrome will have webbing/extra fingers and toes, abnormal head growth-causing dental speech, and vision problems, mid-mod intellectual disability. They will also have resonance issues and conductive hearing loss.


A) Angelman Syndrome

B) Fragile X Syndrome

C) Apert Syndrome

D) CHARGE Syndrome

What is Apert Syndrome?

100

Which of the following is NOT a normal disfluency?

A. whole word

B. part word repetition

C. whole phrase

D. interjections

What is part word repetition?

200

This type of dysarthria main etiologies are cerebellar stroke/injury and atrophy of cerebellum.

A. Flaccid

B. Spastic

C. Ataxic

D. Hypokinetic

What is Ataxic?

200

Which of the following below could be symptom if someone had a  a tracheoesophageal fistula?

A. abnormal hole between trachea + esophagus

B. pharynx herniation, food collects in pouch

C. residue at top of airway

D. vallecular residue after swallow

What is abnormal hole between trachea +esophagus?

200

Which two extrinsic muscles elevate the larynx?

A. Infrahyoid and suprahyoid

B. Stylopharyngeus and infrahyoid

C. Suprahyoid and Stylopharyngeus

D. Posterior Cricoarytenoid and suprahyoid

What are the suprahyoid and stylopharygneus?

200

A person with this syndrome will have a distinctive facial appearance by having large ears, short webbed neck, widely spaced eyes, low hairline, short stature, congenital heart defects, and a learning disability. They will also have a sensorineural hearing loss, feeding difficulty, and developmental delay.

A. Crouzon Syndrome

B. Noonan Syndrome

C. Pierre-Robin Syndrome

D. Treacher-Collins Syndrome

What is Noonan Syndrome?

200

Ssssssssssssally took my ball is an example of

A. sound prolongation

B. block

C. part word repetition

D. interjection

What is a sound prolongation?

300

When someone has this type of dysarthria, they have a breathy, wet, or hoarse voice. Their voice will be low intensity and monoloud. They decrease in ability to phonate over time. They will also be hypernasal with nasal emissions. They sound unintelligibile, use imprecise consonants, DDKs may be slow and slurred, and have tongue fasciculations.

A. Flaccid

B. Spastic

C. Hyperkinetic

D. Hypokinetic


What is Flaccid?

300

This is designed to improve UES opening; patient lays flat, raises their head (looks at toes) + holds that position for about 1 min x 3 reps.

A. EMST

B. CTAR

C. Shaker Head Lift

D. Lingual Resistance

What is Shaker Head Lift?

300

This area is where complex language related functions occur.

A) Broca's area

B) Angular Gyrus

C) Heschl's Gyrus

D) Primary Motor area

What is angular gyrus?

300

A person with this syndrome will have micrognathia (smaller lower jaw), glossoptosis (retraction of tongue), and cleft palate.

A. Pierre-Robin Syndrome

B. Stickler Syndrome

C. Turner Syndrome

D. Angelman Syndrome

What is Pierre-Robin Syndrome?

300
What is the most common type of stuttering?


A. Psychogenic stuttering

B. Neurogenic stuttering

C. Childhood onset stuttering

What is childhood onset stuttering?

400

A person with this type of dysarthria will have involuntary movements at rest and during speech. They will also have articulatory breakdowns and have involuntary voice stoppages.

A. Flaccid

B. Spastic

C. Hyperkinetic

D. Hypokinetic

What is hyperkinetic?

400

This type of swallow tries to protect airway at level of true vocal folds. When doing this type of swallow, you take a deep breath (inhale) and hold, keep holding your breath as you swallow, and cough immediately after swallow.

A. Effortful Swallow

B. Mendelsohn Maneuver

C. Supraglottic Swallow

D. Super-Supraglottic Swallow

What is supraglottic swallow?

400

What does diencephalon do?

A. Makes up cerebral cortex

B. Regulates movement

C. Relays sensory info

D. Connects endocrine with nervous system

What is connects endocrine with nervous system?

400
A person with this syndrome will have severe birth defects, congenital heart and brain abnormalities, spina bifida, eye defects, polydactyly (extra fingers/toes), and hypotonia. They will also have a severe intellectual disability, cleft ip and/or palate, and failure to thrive.


A) Trisomy 13

B) Usher Syndrome

C) Crouzon Syndrome

D) Moebius Syndrome

What is Trisomy 13?

400

This fluency disorder is characterized by irregular speaking rate, excessive normal disfluencies, and excessive repetitions. This can co-occur with language, articulation, attention, and other disorders.

A. Neurogenic Stuttering

B. Cluttering

C. Psychogenic Stuttering

D. Childhood Onset Stuttering

What is cluttering?

500

The main etiologies of this type of dysarthria are CVA, Degenerative Disease, TBI, Infection (Meningitis), and Cerebral Palsy.

A. Flaccid

B. Spastic

C. Hypokinetic

D. Hyperkinetic

What is Spastic?

500

Which of the following is a symptom if a person has reduced VP closure?

A. delyaed oral onset of swallow

B. food remains on tongue

C. residue at top of airway

D. nasal penetration

What is nasal penetration?

500

This cranial nerve is motor and sensory. For motor, it controls intrinsic laryngeal muscles, VP closure+ approximation, constricts the esophagus. For sensory, it senses food residue in larynx, pharynx, and esophagus. It also senses larynx, pharynx, external ear, trachea, esophagus +diaphgragm.

A. X 

B. V

C. XI

D. VII

What is X?

500

A person with this syndrome will have coloboma (defect in iris/retina), heart defect, atresia choanae( blockage of nasal passage), restrictive growth and development, genital abnormality, ear abnormality/deafness (sensorineural hearing loss)

A. Nager Syndrome

B. Moebius Syndrome

C. Van der Woude Syndrome

D. CHARGE Syndrome

What is CHARGE Syndrome?

500

Adult stuttering events tend to occur on all the following EXCEPT

A. words beginning with consonants rather than vowels

B. short words rather than long ones

C. content words rather than function

D. sentence-initial (early) words rather than later words

What is short words rather than long ones?

(adults stuttering events would occur on longer words instead of shorter words)

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