Apraxia is a motor disorder in
whi
ch volitional or voluntary movement is impaired without
muscle weakness. The ability to select and sequence
movements is impaired. Oral apraxia affects one ability to
move the muscles of the mouth for non-speech purposes.
Someone with oral apraxia would have trouble coughing,
swallowing, wiggling their tongue or blowing a kiss when
asked to do so. Verbal apraxia, or apraxia of speech is an
impairment in the sequencing of speech sounds.
Apraxia is different from
dysarthria in that there is no muscle weakness. The errors
heard in dysarthric speech and usually consistent and
predictable, while errors in apraxic speech are
unpredictable. Apraxic speakers "grope" for the correct
word; they may make several attempts at a word before they
get it right.
Acquired Apraxia
Apraxia that happens as a
result of a incident causing brain damage is said to be
"acquired". This can result from stroke, head injury, brain
tumours, toxins, or infections. It can so severe that the
individual is unable to initiate speech or so mild that an
individual only has occasional difficulties in conversation
pronouncing multi-syllabic words.
Treatment approaches for
apraxia of speech depend on the severity of the impairment.
For people with moderate to severe apraxia, therapy may
start by saying individual sounds and contrasting them,
thinking about how the lips and tongue should be placed.
Tapping or clapping out the rhythm of speech helps some
speakers to speak more clearly. Contrastive stress drills
use the natural rhythm of speech to increase
intelligibility. In this exercise, the same sentence is
repeated with a different stress patterns, changing the
meaning of the sentence. Individuals with mild apraxia learn
strategies to use to help them produce the longer words that
give them trouble. For the very severe apraxia, alternative
and augmentative systems are often employed.
Developmental Apraxia
Developmental apraxia of speech
(DAS) is not well understood. This is a disorder that occurs
in children and is present from birth. There are no specific
lesion sites in the brain in cases of developmental apraxia;
acquired apraxia can be linked to specific lesion sites.
When children do not develop speech normally and are unable
to produce consonant sounds, they may be apraxic. It is
difficult to diagnose as expressive language impairment may
cloud the issue. Young children only use a few words at at
time and it has been argued that delays in language
expression can disrupt a child's ability to gain voluntary
motor control over their speech muscles. Some children with
DAS have generalized incoordination.
There are several treatment
programs for DAS. Some approaches uses tactile cues: PROMPT
(Prompts for Restructuring Oral Muscular Phonetic Targets,
Deborah Hayden), Touch-Cue, motokinesthetic. Traditional
articulation therapies are modified, using phonetic
placement, progressive approximation approaches. For
children with limited expressive language, the development
of a core vocabulary can simultaneously target improving
speech. Therapy usually focuses on sound combinations and
movement patterns rather than isolated sounds. Children also
benefit from pairing speech with other rhythmic motor
activities like clapping or marching.