Case Study Flashcards
1
Q
Type of dysarthria
A
Mixed - hypokinetic, spastic, ataxic
Hypokinetic-spastic - 50%
Hypokinetic-spastic-ataxia - 38%
2
Q
Motor symptoms of MSA-P
A
Rigidity, Bradykinesia, tremor, poor balance
3
Q
Dysarthria in MSA-P
A
- reduced volume of voice
- slow rate
- inappropriate silences
- imprecise articulation
- voice stoppages
- audible inspiration
- monopitch
4
Q
Communication in MSA-P
A
- increasing cognitive difficulties; results in difficulty processing language to understand
- plan for the loss of speech - voice banking
5
Q
Hypokinetic dysarthria
A
- result of damage to the basal ganglia (helps muscles move)
- slow, monotone, rigid sounding speech
- hoarseness, roughness, breathiness, imprecise with consonants
6
Q
Ataxic dysarthria
A
- damage to cerebellum (helps coordinate muscle movement)
- trouble producing vowels and consonants
- irregular or slow rhythm of speech, with pauses and abrupt explosions of sound
- excessively equal stress on every syllable
7
Q
Spastic dysarthria
A
- damage to the upper Neurons on one or both sides of the brain
- strained or harsh
- impaired co-ordination and control of movement
- reduced muscle tone (hypotonia)
- difficulties evident in speech tasks (multi-syllabic words or utterances of greater length
8
Q
MSA affects what part of the brain
A
Cerebellum and basal ganglia
9
Q
What to subsystems of speech to assess
A
Prosody, articulation, resonance, phonation, breathing/respiration
10
Q
Speech characteristics
A
- speak quietly and in one tone
- don’t convey much emotion
- speech breathy or hoarse
- might slur words, mumble or trail off
- unsteady and flat
11
Q
MSA-P and dysarthria
A
(Rusz et al, 2019)
- 50% MSA-P had moderate dysarthria
- 28% MSA-P has severe dysarthria
- 50% of MSA-P had hypokinetic-spastic
- 38% of MSA-P had hypokinetic-spastic-ataxic