Hypokinetic Dysarthria Flashcards

1
Q

Hypokinetic Dysarthria: Overview

A

Associated with BG control circuit pathology.

Can manifest in any/all levels of speech production, but is most evident in voice, articulation, and prosody.

Decreased ROM is a significant contributor

Reflects problems of motor control such as preparation, maintenance, and switching of motor problems.

Hypokinesia = reduced movement

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2
Q

Hypokinetic Dysarthria: Characteristics

A

Reflects the effects of:

  • Rigidity
  • Reduced force
  • ROM
  • Slow individual but sometimes fast repetitive movements of speech
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3
Q

Clinical Characteristics of BG Control Circuit Disorders Associated with Hypokinetic Dysarthria

A
  • Parkinsonism
  • Bradykinesia
  • Rigidity characterized by slowness of movement and stiffness (apparent during passive stretch on muscles)
  • Posture characterized by involuntary flexion of the head, trunk, arms.
  • With hypokinesia: reduced ROM, reduced use of affected body part, reduction of habitual movements.
  • Masked/expressionelss facial expression
  • Arm swing when walking
  • Sweating
  • Micrographic writing
  • Cognitive decline, anxiety, depression
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4
Q

Parkinsonism

A

Most common cause of hypokinetic dysarthria

Classic signs include:

  • Tremor at rest (static or resting)
  • Rigidity
  • Bradykinesia
  • Loss of postural reflexes

Tremor in parkinsonism tends to occur when the body part is relaxed and decreases during voluntary movement; most apparent in limbs.

Sweating

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5
Q

Bradykinesia

A

Prominent in BG disorders, it reflects problems with movement planning, initiation, and execution.

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6
Q

Etiologies

A

Any process that interferes with BG control circuit functions can cause hypokinetic dysarthria.

  • Degenerative
  • Vascular
  • Traumatic
  • Infectious
  • Inflammatory
  • Neoplastic
  • Toxic-Metabolic Disease
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7
Q

Parkinson’s Disease

A

A degenerative disease that is the most common neurologic movement disorder

Late adulthood onset

Dysarthria appears several years after other symptoms, but presents in 90% of cases and precedes dysphagia (which occurs in 40%)

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8
Q

Parkinson’s Disease: Characteristics

A
  • Affects speech and voice
  • Hypokinetic dysarthria
  • Decreased loudness
  • Monotone
  • Vocal tremor
  • Hoarseness
  • Rapid rate of speech
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9
Q

Vascular Conditions

A

The following can be associated with parkinsonism and hypokinetic dysarthria:

  • Diffuse frontal lobe white matter lesions
  • BG vascular lesions
  • Midbrain and bilateral thalamic strokes (sometimes)

Cerebral Hyponoxia can also produce parkinsonian symptoms.

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10
Q

Toxic/Metabolic Conditions

A

The following can cause parkinsonism:

  • Certain drugs that block dopamine receptors
  • Heavy exposure to metals or chemicals
  • Alcohol withdrawal (temporary Parkinsonism)
  • Acquired metabolic disorders including liver failure can damage the BG.
  • Wilson’s Disease
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11
Q

Trauma

A

TBI can cause bradykinesia, rigidity, tremor, etc.

Repeated head trauma can damage the substantia nigra, which over time can lead to parkinsonism-like motor abnormalities such as dementia and hypokinetic dysarthria.

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12
Q

Infectious Conditions

A
  • Influenza
  • Japanese Encephalitis B
  • West Nile
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13
Q

Other Causes

A

Normal pressure hydrocephalus and obstructive hydrocephalus

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14
Q

Patient Perceptions and Complaints

A
  • Others say their voice is weak or quiet
  • Rate is too fast or indistinct productions
  • Hard to initiate speech
  • Drooling and swallowing complaints
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15
Q

Non-Speech Oral Mech

A
  • Reduced blink frequency
  • Unsmiling/masked face
  • Tremor of jaw or lips
  • Tremor of tongue at rest or on protrusion
  • Tight or immobile lips
  • Non-speech AMRs may be slowly initiated, rapid, and restricted in range.
  • 40-80% presence of dysphagia
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16
Q

Speech

A

Conversation, reading, AMRs, and vowel prolongation are most useful tasks.

AMRs offer insight into ROM and rate abnormalities.

Vowel prolongation useful for isolating phonatory characteristics, especially those associated with loudness and quality.

17
Q

Speech Characteristics

A
  • Flat, attentuated, sometimes accelerated speech pattern.
  • Monopitch
  • Monoloudness
  • Reduced contrastivity
  • Reduced stress
  • Short phrases
  • Variable rate
  • Imprecise articulation
  • Reduced loudness
  • Inappropriate silences
  • Breathy dysphonia
  • Short rushes of speech