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Motor Speech Disorders. Include:DysarthriasApraxia of speechMay be:Congenital or acquiredStatic, improving, worseningAssociated with lesions in variety of CNS
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1. Differential Diagnosis Among Acquired Dysarthrias Oklahoma Speech-Language-Hearing Assoc.
Sept. 30, 2010
Joe Duffy, Ph.D., BC-ANCDS
Mayo Clinic
Rochester MN
3. Why Attend To Motor Speech Disorders? They occur frequently
Prevalence may increase
They can be treated/managed
They may announce neurologic disease
4. Why Differential Diagnosis of MSDs?
Understanding nervous system organization for motor speech control
Management decisions
Localization & diagnosis of neurologic disease
5.
“In what must be one of the best kept secrets of our time, both speech-language pathology and medicine have ignored certain incontrovertible facts of major importance to the differential diagnosis of human illness --
voice, speech, and language undergo audible and visible change when people fall prey to certain organic and psychiatric illnesses...
such changes can be the first and only sign of a disease early in its evolution
the manner in which speech becomes defective logically reflects the pathophysiology and psychodynamics of the illness…
Aronson, ASHA, 1987
6. A Skilled Neurologist’s Thinking “I will ask our speech pathologist to evaluate her speech because I am not quite certain about what kind of dysarthria this is and I need as many clues as I can get to know how to proceed.”
7. Another Skilled Neurologist’s Thinking “I think it is important for the patient to visit with the speech consultants here. The two possibilities in my mind is that we are dealing with motor neuron disease or that we are dealing with a variant of multiple system atrophy. If …there is evidence of ataxia in his speech, then we may be dealing with MSA in which case it would be reasonable for the patient to undergo thermoregulatory sweat test and an autonomic reflex screen. However, if his speech is in keeping with motor neuron disease (ALS, ie flaccid or spastic dysarthria only) then I will have the patient undergo EMG… I think the diagnosis here will rest on the speech consultation.”
8. How Did We get Good At This? Darley, F. L., Aronson, A. E, & Brown, J. R. (1969a). Differential diagnostic patterns of dysarthria, Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 12, 246-269.
Darley, F. L., Aronson, A. E, & Brown, J. R. (1969b). Clusters of deviant speech dimensions in the dysarthrias, Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 12, 462-496.
Darley, F. L, Aronson, A. E, & Brown, J. R. (1975). Motor Speech Disorders, Philadelphia: WB Saunders.
9. Dysarthria
A collective name for a group of MSDs associated with disturbed muscular execution or control of the speech mechanism due to CNS and/or PNS damage.
May include abnormalities in strength, speed, range, tone or accuracy of speech movements.
May affect respiration, phonation, resonance, articulation, & prosody.
10. Dysarthria…….. Includes several different types, each corresponding to damage to particular part(s) of the nervous system, & presumably each having different underlying neuropathophysiology.
Each type has different auditory perceptual characteristics which can be distinguished clinically.
Accurate identification has implications for localization; accurate description provides clues for management.
11. Dysarthria Types
12. Evaluation Tools Essential
- Ears
- Eyes
- Hands
Other
- Flashlight
- Tongue blade
- Mirror
- Stop watch
- Audio/video recording
- Acoustic & physiologic instrumentation
13. Clinical Evaluation History
Oral mechanism exam (confirmatory signs)
Vowel prolongation (quality, duration, pitch, loudness, steadiness)
AMRs (speed & rhythm)
SMRs (sequencing/programming)
Contextual speech (all valves & components, prosody)
Stress testing (fatigue)
14. Dysarthria Types
15. Flaccid Dysarthrias – Etiologies (N=154)
16. Flaccid Dysarthrias Neuromuscular Bases Weakness
Reduced force of muscle contraction
Reduced range of individual & repetitive movements
Confirmatory signs
Reduced muscle tone
Reduced reflexes
Atrophy
Fasciculations (only seen with LMN lesions)
17. Confirmatory LMN signs associated with flaccid dysarthria Trigeminal (V)
Jaw deviates to weak side on opening (unilateral)
Jaw hangs open at rest (bilateral)
Face (VII)
Facial droop – flat nasolabial fold
Reduced lip retraction, rounding, puffing
Chin & perioral fasciculations
Unilateral or bilateral
18. Confirmatory LMN signs associated with flaccid dysarthria Velopharyngeal (X, IX, XI)
Hangs lower on weak side @ rest
Elevates toward normal side on gag & phonation
Reduced gag reflex
Larynx (X)
Weak cough & glottal coup
19. Confirmatory LMN signs associated with Flaccid Dysarthria
Tongue (XII)
Deviates to weak side on protrusion
Fasciculations & atrophy
20. Flaccid Dysarthrias RESPIRATORY-LARYNGEAL: Breathiness, hoarseness, diplophonia, stridor, monopitch, monoloudness, short phrases
RESONANCE: Hypernasality, nasal emission
ARTICULATION: Imprecision
PROSODY: Monopitch, monoloudness
DISTINCTIVE: Hypernasality, nasal emission, continuous breathiness, stridor, isolated muscle group involvement
21. Dysarthria Types
22. Spastic Dysarthria – Etiologies (N=144)
23. Major abnormalities associated with UMN lesions- Neuromuscular bases of spastic dysarthria - Typically reflect combined effects of direct & indirect pathway involvement
Spasticity
Weakness
Reduced range of movement
Slowness of movement
24. Spastic Dysarthria Confirmatory signs
Paresis/spasticity of other body parts
Hyperactive reflexes (e.g., gag)
Pathologic reflexes (e.g., suck, Babinski)
Dysphagia, drooling
Pseudobulbar affect
Meaning = Bilateral UMN dysfunction
25. Spastic Dysarthria RESPIRATORY -LARYNGEAL: Strained-strangled voice, harshness, pitch and loudness variability, pitch, pitch breaks and voice stoppages, short phrases
RESONANCE: Hypernasality
ARTICULATION: Imprecise, vowels distorted
PROSODY: rate, excess/equal stress, prolonged phonemes and intervals, short phrases
DISTINCTIVE: harsh/strained voice quality, slow rate, slow/regular AMRs, reduced pitch & loudness variability
26. Dysarthria Types
27. Ataxic Dysarthria – Etiologies (N=166)
28. Ataxic Dysarthria Neuromuscular Bases
Incoordination - Errors in speed, range, force, timing, & direction of movements
Reduced tone
Confirmatory Signs
Hypotonia, slow voluntary movements, jerkiness, wide-based gait, intention tremor
Meaning = Cerebellar dysfunction (paravermal, bilateral, or generalized)
29. Ataxic Dysarthria RESPIRATORY-LARYNGEAL: Monopitch, monoloudness, harsh voice
RESONANCE: Normal to variable, including hyponasality
ARTICULATION: Imprecision, irregular articulatory breakdowns, distorted vowels
PROSODY: Slow rate, excess/equal stress, prolonged phonemes and intervals, inappropriate silences
DISTINCTIVE: Irregular articulatory breakdowns, irregular AMRs, vowel distortions, excess/equal stress, dysprosody, excess loudness variations
30. Dysarthria Types
31. Hypokinetic Dysarthria – Etiologies (N=167)
32. Hypokinetic Dysarthria Neuromuscular Bases
Slow individual movements
Fast or slow repetitive movements
Reduced range of individual & repetitive movements
Reduced force
Excessive tone (rigidity)
Confirmatory Signs
Rigidity False starts
Decreased ROM Resting tremor (perioral tremulousness)
Bradykinesia Masked facies
Slow or fast repetitive movements
Meaning = Basal ganglia control circuit dysfunction
33. Hypokinetic Dysarthria RESPIRATORY-LARYNGEAL: Breathiness, short phrases
RESONANCE: hypernasality
ARTICULATION: Imprecise
PROSODY: Monopitch, monoloudness, short rushes, short phrases, variable rate, reduced stress
DISTINCTIVE: Fast/accelerated rate, rapid/blurred AMRs, reduced loudness & stress, monopitch, monoloudness, breathiness, palilalia
34. Dysarthria Types
35. Hyperkinetic Dysarthrias – Etiologies (N=141)
36. Hyperkinetic Dysarthrias Deviant characteristics are product of abnormal involuntary movements that occur on continuum of:
rhythmic irregular & unpredictable
rapid slow.
Present in any or all components of speech -- prominent effects on rate & prosody.
Abnormal movements sometimes activated only during speech (e.g., SD - focal, speech induced dystonia).
Highly variable across individuals as a function of
Type of abnormal movement
Loci of abnormal movement(s)
Invol movements reflect “Impaired inhibition of competing motor patterns” (Mink, 2007, Arch Neurol).
Hyperkinetic mvt disorders due to presumed reduction of the normal inhibitory BG output.
Chorea – frequent, brief, sudden, twitchlike movements that flow from body part to body part in a chaotic manner, but often resembles fragments of normal movements; the invol movements are sometimes converted into motor patterns that appear voluntary. It exists as a spectrum of movements that can be proximal or distal, large or small in amplitude, and intermittent or nearly continuous. It is assoc w abn in striatum or STN. At present, not know if activity driving choreatic mvts originates in BG or in thalamocorticval or brainstem motor pattern generators.
Dystonia – invol spasms producing twisting postures in different body parts. Assoc w focal lesions in putamen, GP, or thalamus. May reflect relative dopamine deficiency or dopamine type 2 receptor dysfunction. Abnormal cocontraction of agonist and antagonist muscles usually exacerbated by movement. Current hypothesis is that it results fro incomplete suppression of competing motor patterns due to insufficient surround inhibition of competing motor pattern generators. Deficient surround inhibition may also lead to “overflow” contraction of adjacent muscles. Decreased efficacy of the surround with or without expansion of the center causes inappropriate disinhibition of unwanted muscle activity.
Invol movements reflect “Impaired inhibition of competing motor patterns” (Mink, 2007, Arch Neurol).
Hyperkinetic mvt disorders due to presumed reduction of the normal inhibitory BG output.
Chorea – frequent, brief, sudden, twitchlike movements that flow from body part to body part in a chaotic manner, but often resembles fragments of normal movements; the invol movements are sometimes converted into motor patterns that appear voluntary. It exists as a spectrum of movements that can be proximal or distal, large or small in amplitude, and intermittent or nearly continuous. It is assoc w abn in striatum or STN. At present, not know if activity driving choreatic mvts originates in BG or in thalamocorticval or brainstem motor pattern generators.
Dystonia – invol spasms producing twisting postures in different body parts. Assoc w focal lesions in putamen, GP, or thalamus. May reflect relative dopamine deficiency or dopamine type 2 receptor dysfunction. Abnormal cocontraction of agonist and antagonist muscles usually exacerbated by movement. Current hypothesis is that it results fro incomplete suppression of competing motor patterns due to insufficient surround inhibition of competing motor pattern generators. Deficient surround inhibition may also lead to “overflow” contraction of adjacent muscles. Decreased efficacy of the surround with or without expansion of the center causes inappropriate disinhibition of unwanted muscle activity.
37. Hyperkinetic Dysarthrias---Neuromuscular bases & confirmatory signs Too Much Movement
Chorea
Dystonias
Tremor
Palatopharyngolaryngeal myoclonus
38. Chorea
Involuntary, rapid, nonstereotypic, unpatterned random, purposeless movements of a body part
at 1 or multiple levels at rest, during sustained postures, & during speech.
39. Chorea--Speech Characteristics
Phonation - Respiration: sudden forced insp./exp.; excess loudness var.; strained-strangled voice; voice stoppages; transient breathiness; grunts
Resonance: intermittent hypernasality & weak pressure Cs
Articulation: distortions/irregular breakdowns; distorted vowels; slow & irregular AMRs; smacking noises
Prosody: prolonged intervals & phonemes; inappropriate silences; variable rate; excess/insufficient/variable stress
40. Dystonia Relatively slow waxing/waning involuntary postures resulting from excessive cocontractures of antagonist muscles
Tend to be slow & sustained but there may be superimposed quick movements
Can involve:
only one body segment
Contiguous regions (segmental)
Generalized
Can be present at rest or during sustained postures or can be movement induced (e.g., spasmodic dysphonia)
41. Dystonia--General
Primary complaints: effortful; inability to get it out; involuntary movements; dysphagia
Nonspeech orofacial findings:
Normal size, strength, symmetry, reflexes
Occasional drooling, dysphagia, blepharospasm
Relatively slow waxing/waning movements @ 1 or multiple levels @ rest & during sustained postures, but sometimes only during speech
Occasional improvement with sensory tricks
42. Dystonia--Speech Characteristics
Phonation-Respiration: voice stoppages; strained-harsh voice; audible inspiration; excess or alternating loudness; unsteady, tremor-like voice
Resonance: intermittent hypernasality
Articulation: distortions & irregular breakdowns; distorted vowels; slow & irregular AMRs; noises
Prosody: inappropriate silences; excess loudness variation; excessive-inefficient-variable stress
43. Neurogenic Spasmodic Dysphonia (SD)
Technically a hyperkinetic dysarthria because many SDs associated with tremor or dystonia (e.g., Meige syndrome, focal cranial dystonias, torticollis)
Adductor, abductor, or mixed in character
Onset at 20-80 years (M ~ 45-50)
M:F ~ 1:1 - 1:4
Begins insidiously; remission rare when neurologic
44. Neurogenic SD (cont.) Often associated with flu-like illness &/or psychologic stress, even when neurologic (worsened by stress, fatigue)
Singing, laughter, “emotional” speech may be normal
Usually speech induced
? secondary to basal ganglia or cerebellar control circuit pathology
45. Neurogenic SD -- Adductor Primary Complaints: ?’d speaking effort & fatigue; ETOH responsive; tight, strained, voice & chest
Nonspeech Oral Mechanisms: normal unless tremor or dystonia elsewhere; abnormal laryngeal exam during phonation; jerky, arrhythmic thoracic/abdominal movements & facial grimacing secondary to laryngospasm
46. Neurogenic SD -- Adductor (cont.) Speech Characteristics
Continuous or intermittent strained, jerky, squeezed, effortful voice
Voice arrests
Tremor
Occasional hypernasality
Inappropriate silences, slow rate
47. Neurogenic SD -- Abductor Primary Complaints: ?’d speaking effort & fatigue; ETOH responsive; “run out of air”
Nonspeech Oral Mechanism: similar to adductor SD but “spasms” are abductor
Speech Characteristics
Brief, breathy or aphonic segments at utterance onset or in VL environment
Occasional hypernasality
Short phrases secondary to glottal air wastage
48. Tremor Rhythmic (periodic) movement of a body part
The most common involuntary movement
Can be resting, postural, action or terminal
Essential tremor occurs with sustained posture and action, usually in upper limbs, head, or voice (probably related to cerebellar control circuit dysfunction).
49. Organic (Essential) Voice Tremor
A focally manifest hyperkinetic dysarthria
Present in ~ 20% with essential tremor (Jankovic ‘90)
50% familial
Locus ? cerebellorubrothalamocortical circuit
Onset usually gradual; patient may be unaware of presence
Worse with stress/fatigue; may improve with ETOH
Often accompanied by head/extremity tremor but can be isolated
50. Organic Voice Tremor (cont.) Primary Complaints: shaky, jerky voice; worse with fatigue; ETOH responsive
Physical Findings: rhythmic vertical laryngeal movements & adductor/abductor oscillation of cords in synch with voice tremor; tremor possible in other speech structures
Speech Characteristics:
Quavering, rhythmic waxing/waning tremor (4-7 Hz)
Voice arrest possible
Articulation normal but rate may be slow
Restricted pitch/loudness variability
51. Palatopharyngolaryngeal Myoclonus
Abrupt, rhythmic/semirhythmic unilateral or bilateral movements of palate, pharynx, larynx (& occasionally nares, lips, tongue, respiratory muscles)
Locus: Guillain-Mollaret triangle (dentate n., red n., inferior olive)
Etiology:
Usually brainstem or cerebellar stroke
Other: tumor, MS, TBI, encephalitis, degenerative CNS disease
Onset can be delayed following acute insult
Can be benign
52. Palatopharyngolaryngeal Myoclonus
Primary Complaints: earclicks; often unaware of movements
Nonspeech Orofacial Findings: abrupt, rhythmic/semirhythmic unilateral or bilateral movements of palate, pharynx, larynx (& occasionally nares, lips, tongue, respiratory muscles)
53. Palatopharyngolaryngeal Myoclonus - Speech Characteristics
Phonation-Respiratory: myoclonic “beats” @ ~ 1-4 Hz; voice arrests when severe
Resonance: occasional intermittent hypernasality
Articulation-Prosody: Usually normal* but brief silent intervals if myoclonus interrupts respiration, phonation, or articulation
*But usually assoc. with spastic, ataxic, or flaccid dysarthria
54. Dysarthria Types
55. Unilateral UMN – Etiologies (N=98)
56. Unilateral Upper Motor Neuron Dysarthria Neuromuscular bases
Weakness
Incoordination
Spasticity
Lesion foci
Frontal lobe
Corona radiata
Internal capsule
Brainstem
57. Unilateral Upper Motor Neuron Dysarthria (cont.) Confirmatory signs
Hemiparesis/plegia
Central face weakness
Central tongue weakness
58. Unilateral UMN Dysarthria (cont.) Primary speech characteristics
Imprecise articulation
Irregular articulatory breakdowns
Slow (-1) & ? irregular AMRs
Hoarseness
Reduced loudness
59. Dysarthria Types
60. Mixed Dysarthrias – Etiologies (N=406)
61. Mixed Dysarthrias Most Common Mixes (300 Mayo patients)
flaccid-spastic - 42%
ataxic-spastic - 23%
hypokinetic-spastic - 7%
ataxic-flaccid-spastic - 6%
hypokinetic-hyperkinetic - 3%
other - 19%
62. Mixed Dysarthrias Disease & Type (examples)
ALS - spastic-flaccid
M.S. - spastic, ataxic*
Wilson’s disease - hypokinetic, spastic, ataxic* *
Shy-Drager syndrome - hypokinetic, spastic, ataxic, flaccid* *
Progressive supranuclear palsy - hypokinetic, spastic, ataxic**
* any type possible
* * one or more possible