Motor Speech
Dysarthria
Spastic Dysarthria
Flaccid Dysarthria
Dysphagia
Counseling/TX/DX
100

AOS and dysarthria is difficulty at what level: speech, language, or cognition?

speech
100

What is the difference between hypertonia and hypotonia?

Hypertonia = increased tone; hypotonia = lack of tone

100

What are 2 characteristics of spastic dysarthria?

increased muscle tone, hyperreflexia, spasticity

100

True or False: Cranial nerves decussate and are paired.

False

100

Name two roles of the SLP with dysphagia patients.

Keep patients hydrated/nourished, keep patients on safest/least restrictive diet, maintain QoL

100

Whats one normal attention change with aging?

Selective attention slower, more distracted, compromised ability on divided attention

200

Name two ways apraxia and dysarthria differ.

Varied.

200

What is the lesion location of UUMN vs. spastic dysarthria?

UUMN = unilateral UMN; spastic = bilateral UMN
200
What type of damage (unilateral/bilateral) occurs with spastic dysarthria?
bilateral
200

What would unilateral damage to the facial nerve impact?

articulation, oral motor, ipsilateral "weakness"

200

Name one symptom of oral dysphagia.

Pocketing, anterior leakage, premature spillage, mastication issues
200

What is one decline in memory with normal age related change?

Short term recall, episodic memory, declarative, working memory

300

Name 3 cranial nerves important for speech.

Vagus, Trigeminal, Facial, Hypoglossal

300

UMNs live in the ________; LMN live in the __________

CNS, PNS

300

True or False: All lesions innervated below the structure would be impacted.

True
300
Bilateral damage to the recurrent laryngeal nerve would cause?

bilateral vocal fold paralysis

300

What are 3 signs and symptoms of dysphagia?

Coughing, throat clearing, wet vocals, sneezing, runny nose, watery eyes, desaturated O2.

300

Name 3 aspects of an assessment you would complete for adult language/cognition.

Case hx, OME, Interview, Formal assessment

400

Name one way an AOS assessment would be different from a dysarthria assessment.

DDK, increasingly complex words with AOS

400

UMNs decussate where?

Medulla

400

Spastic dysarthria results in what type of damage (contralateral/ipsilateral)?

Contralateral

400

Flaccid dysarthria results in (ipsilateral/contralateral) damage?

Ipsilateral

400

Name one type of standardized assessment for dysphagia.

MBS, FEES

400

How are STG different from LTG?

LTG is what you want them to complete overall by end of tx; STG are objectives to reach LTG

500

What is one compensatory strategy for dysarthria and one restorative strategy for AOS?

Compensatory dysarthria - AAC

Restorative AOS - PROMPT, MIT, Intersystemic Reorganization

500

The DAP is for ________ and IAP is for ________

DAP = volitional movement; IAP = autonomic

500

How does the stretch reflex impact spastic dysarthria?

Varies.
500

What is one type of compensatory strategy and one type of restorative strategy?

Varies

500

Name two types of compensatory strategies for dysphagia.

Diet modification, postural changes, etc

500

What are 3 negative emotions a client might encounter during tx?

depression, anxiety, avoidance, repression, loss, etc