Dynamic assessment of articulation during lingual fatigue in myasthenia gravis


Autoria(s): Wenke, Rachel J.; Goozee, Justine V.; Murdoch, Bruce E.; La Pointe, Leonard L.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

The present study aimed to investigate how induced lingual fatigue affected lingual strength, articulatory kinematics, and perceptual speech features in CS, a 51-year-old female with active myasthenia gravis (MG), and three age and gender matched control participants, Lingual fatigue was elicited via a series of endurance tasks using a tongue pressure bulb. Following each endurance task, the participants performed a speech task containing the phonemes /k/, /t/, and /j/ that was recorded with an electromagnetic articulograph, followed by a lingual strength assessment using a tongue pressure bulb. Participants repeated this schedule over five phases and kinematic and strength changes during each phase were compared to baseline measurements. All of CSs significant kinematic changes occurred during the final fatigue phase compared to 27.3% of the control group's kinematic changes occurring during this phase, suggesting the kinematic changes associated with fatigue were not accelerated in CS. The endurance tasks also elicited different kinematic effects for CSs anterior and posterior tongue segments. While CS exhibited mostly similar kinematic and perceptual changes to the control group, some of CS's perceptual transcriptions for /k/ and kinematic changes were not replicated, indicating that some different perceptual and physiological consequences to CS's speech were elicited by the endurance tasks.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:79917

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Delmar Learning

Palavras-Chave #Clinical Neurology #Tongue Force #Movements #Endurance #Strength #Injury #Speech #C1 #321025 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Hearing and Speech #730303 Occupational, speech and physiotherapy
Tipo

Journal Article