University of Oregon
Impairment-Based Treatments for the Dysarthrias
GOAL = change underlying physiology (STARSS) to improve function of speech systems
TREATMENT TARGETS = STARSS characteristics of speech systems
**When evaluating any impairment-level treatment, ask about the effects on speech!
**Differential diagnosis is essential when intervening at the impairment-level!
Impairment-Level Approaches to Treatment
• Pharmacological management (also see specific Disorder Summaries)
• Surgical intervention (also see specific Disorder Summaries)
• Biofeedback techniques
o VisiPitch from Kay Elemetrics:
o Electropalatography (expensive research tehqniue)
o Nasometer from Kay Elemetrics:
o See-Scape from AliMed ($121.00):
• Direct behavioral interventions to improving functioning of the speech systems
Treatment Options by Dysarthria Type (see Duffy pp. 485-493)
|Hypokinetic dysarthria |Pharmacological management (e.g., Levodopa) |
| |Surgical intervention (e.g., deep brain stimulation) |
| |SPEAK OUT! Voicei Therapy to improve intent, loudness, and intelligibility |
| |Lee-Silverman Voice Therapy (LSVT®) to improve respiration/phonation |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., delayed auditory feedback) to reset rate control |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., VisiPitch) to reset prosody |
| |Rate control (pacing boards) to reset prosody |
|Hyperkinetic |Pharmacological management for excess muscle contractions (e.g., Botox for spasmodic dysphonia) |
|dysarthrias |Pharmacological management to restore neurotransmitter imbalance |
| |Sensory tricks for some people with dystonias |
| |Rate control (for some people?) to reset prosody |
|Ataxic dysarthria |Biofeedback to increase loudness awareness & coordination of breathing with speech |
| |Rate control (e.g., pacing boards) to reset prosody |
| |Stress/Intonation drills to improve prosody |
|Spastic dysarthria |Pharmacological intervention (e.g., Baclofen for spasticity?) |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., Nasometer or See-Scape) to reduce hypernasality (?) |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., VisiPitch) to reset prosody |
| |Relaxation/stretching techniques to improve function (?) |
|UUMN dysarthrias |Biofeedback (e.g., Nasometer or See-Scape) to reduce hypernasality (?) |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., VisiPitch) to reset prosody |
| |Oral-motor exercises to improve articulation (?) |
| |Articulation drills to improve articulation |
| |Rate control to reset prosody |
|Flaccid dysarthrias |Pharmacological management (e.g., Mestinon for MG) |
| |Surgical intervention (e.g., nerve anastomosis; TVF medialization & thyroplasty) |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., Nasometer or See-Scape) to reduce hypernasality |
| |Biofeedback (e.g., VisiPitch) to reset prosody |
| |Oral-motor exercises to improve articulation (?) |
| |Articulation drills to improve articulation |
| |Stress/Intonation drills to improve prosody |
Direct Behavioral Interventions to Improve Functioning of the Speech Systems:
• Follow a hierarchical progression (Dworkin, 1991):
o 1st Order: Resonance Respiration
o 2nd Order: Phonation
o 3rd Order: Articulation Prosody
Principles of Motor Learning Essential to Impairment-Level Direct Interventions:
(Duffy, 2005; Maas et al., 2009)
• Use speech to improve speech
• Drill is essential to (re)train neurological pathways & movement patterns
o Neurons that fire together wire together.
o Large amounts of variable practice, distributed over time.
• Active movement is better than passive movement
• Goal is to have a learner (who retains/transfers knowledge) rather than a performer who only performs with clinician cues
• Self-learning has added value (when cognitively able)
• Instruction improves performance
• Feedback is essential to motor learning
o Fade to delayed feedback about general knowledge of results
Two Principles of Strength Training Programs (Clark, 2003):
• Overload
o If the goal is to strengthen (increase force of muscle contraction), then exercise must tax a muscle beyond its typical workload, to the point of fatigue
o Intensity is essential to achieve overload
o Overload can be achieved through:
▪ Resistance (progressively increase resistance/duration)
▪ Number of Repetitions (reps/set; sets/session)
• Specificity of Training
o The effects of strength training are highly specific to the trained behavior (movement)
o Oral muscles work in groups (unlike limb muscles that work in pairs), so target them as a group, not individually
o Only strengthen movements that are directly relevant to the target behavior/movement (i.e., speech-related movements)
Improving Respiratory Support:
• Inspiratory Muscle Strength Training
o Goal = increase physiological inhalatory support to allow functional speech
o Devices to train inspiratory muscles:
▪ Incentive spirometer for feedback
• Encourage slow, controlled, deep breaths
• Available in most medical settings
• 1 per patient
• $7-15 on
• See Handout for instructions to use
▪ Tactile feedback for diaphragmatic breathing
• Feel difference between “belly” and “chest” breathing
• May co-treat with PT/OT
• See Handout for specific instructions
▪ Inspiratory Muscle Strength Training device
• Provides progressive resistance to tax/overload diaphragm
• 1 device per patient
• Threshold® Inspiratory Muscle Trainer ($39.95):
• Exhalatory Muscle Strength Training
▪ Minimum driving force: 3-5 cm H2O of subglottal air pressure
▪ Typical conversational force: 7-10 cm H2O of subglottal air pressure
o Devices to train expiratory muscles:
▪ Water glass manometer for controlled exhalation with adequate pressure
• Minimal: 5 cm H2O of air pressure for 5 seconds
• See Handout for specific instructions
▪ Expiratory Muscle Strength Training Device
• Provides progressive resistance to tax/overload muscles
• 1 device per patient
• EMST 150 device ($39.95):
• Feedback for Coordinating Breathing with Speech
o Goal = increase coordination between breathing & speech to support more natural & effective speech
o Breathing for life (at rest) is different from breathing for speech, in terms of timing and amounts of air
o For speakers with ataxic dysarthria, may also consider providing feedback on loudness with a Sound Level Meter to improve awareness of loudness
▪ $49.99 at Radio Shack
Improving Resonance:
• Goal = increase velopharyngeal closure to support efficient speech production
• ***Non-speech activities do NOT change physiological support for speech (e.g., blowing, sucking, pushing, whistles, straws, horns, stroking, brushing, cold)
• To improve velopharyngeal closure with behavioral interventions at the impairment-level, during speech tasks, there are two options:
o Biofeedback
▪ Goal = increase physiological function to support VP closure during speech tasks
▪ Utilizes “discovery learning” for client to learn how to control their own motor movements during successful speech
▪ Example devices: See-Scape, Nasometer, mirror
o Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) resistance training
▪ Goal = improve physiologic function of VP closure through progressive resistance training to strengthen VP closure muscles, during speech tasks (David Kuehn & colleagues)
▪ **Work with a respiratory therapist
▪ The major muscle of VP closure is the ____________ ______ ___________ muscle, innervated by CN X.
Yorkston et al. (2001) Practice Guidelines for Velopharyngeal Management:
[pic]
Improving Phonation:
• Goal = increase TVF adduction to support vocal quality & efficient speech
• TVF Closure Exercises
o Goal = improve effortful TVF adduction to support phonation
o Inconclusive evidence for improving function of weak (not paralyzed) TVF
o Techniques: push/pull (aka Valsalva/ isometric); hand clasping
o **If you try it, be wary of vocal strain/hyperfunction!!!
• LSVT® (Lee Silverman Voice Therapy) – [Lorraine Ramig, Cynthia Fox et al.]
o Goal = increase range of motion of respiratory/phonatory systems to improve loudness (and speech intelligibility)
o Rationale: PD results in small, restricted movements, so LSVT stimulates the person to make BIGGER movements (i.e., LOUD voice)
o Strong evidence to support LSVT for speakers with mild-moderate hypokinetic dysarthria; see EB summary for other dysarthria types
o 5 Main Treatment Principles for simplicity:
▪ Focus on VOICE
▪ Focus on HIGH EFFORT
▪ Focus on INTENSIVE TREATMENT
▪ Focus on CALIBRATION
▪ QUANTIFICATION (i.e., measure outcomes)
o Tasks/Procedures during therapy sessions:
▪ First 30 minutes – practice loud voice in structured tasks
▪ Last 30 minutes – practice generalization with a speech hierarchy
o See Handouts for additional information & materials on LSVT
Spencer et al. (2003) Practice Guidelines for Respiratory/Phonatory Management:
[pic]
Improving Articulation:
• Goal = increase oral musculature (jaw, lips, tongue) to support efficient speech
• Oral Strengthening Exercises
o Goal = improve physiological functioning when oral muscles weakness impacts on speech
o Two principles: Overload muscles + Specificity of speech-related movements
o See handout for additional information and details
• Articulation Drills
o Goal = improve accuracy of articulatory placement to support speech
o Based on principles of motor learning:
▪ Drill is essential
▪ Self-instruction has added value (“discovery learning”)
• Client “discovers” ways to improve his/her speech through trial & error, without explicit instruction from the clinician
• Most appropriate for clients who are able to learn from their own mistakes (i.e., without frontal lobe injury)
▪ SLPs job is to carefully select stimuli to target difficult articulatory placements (and minimal contrasts)
o Procedures:
▪ Set-up a “barrier” game & carefully select appropriate stimuli
▪ Client says the target word, without the clinician knowing the word
• If clinician understands, praise & move on
• If clinician does not understand:
o Ask client to try again
o Ask client to try again, but “try it a different way”
o Model a clear production, but don’t give explicit instructions for articulatory placement
Improving Prosody:
• Prosody refers to speaking rate, as well as stress/intonation contours
• Goal = reset timing or stress/intonation systems for all speaking contexts to increase speech intelligibility & naturalness
• Stress Drills for stress/intonation/emotion
o VisiPitch may be useful for biofeedback on these tasks. Auditory or videotape self-analysis may also be useful.
o Use drills that require the client to place emphasis on the correct syllables in words (stress) or words in sentences (intonation)
▪ Stress: minimal contrasts (e.g., contract ~ contract); start at word level, then move to sentences & connected speech
▪ Intonation: use Q/A format and ask questions about statements; client is to respond in complete sentences
EXAMPLE: Beyoncé travelled to France for a concert.
Who traveled? Beyoncé traveled to France for a concert.
What did she do? Beyoncé traveled to France for a concert.
Where did she go? Beyoncé traveled to France for a concert.
Why did she go? Beyoncé traveled to France for a concert.
o Use drills that require the client to use different emotional intonations (e.g., say neutral sentences in a happy, sad, angry, surprised, neutral tone).
▪ Fade from imitating models to cued productions to conversational speech about emotional topics.
Example sentences:
▪ The dog ran away.
▪ Tomorrow I’m leaving for Chicago.
▪ The girl threw the ball over the fence.
▪ We sold our beach house last week.
• Internal Rate Control
o Teach pausing at appropriate boundaries (word, phrase, sentence) or by prolonging vowels
o Use metronome or pacing strategies (e.g., pacing boards or finger tapping) with the goal of resetting internal pacing representations & gradually fading external supports
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