Category: Apraxia and Dysarthria

Autism: Many Therapists / Many Opinions

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I work in a school and I have an autistic student 4;0 with limited verbalizations. She also sees a private therapist who keeps telling the parents that my methodology isn’t right, and that is why the girl isn’t making progress. She says that apraxia therapy has to be done a certain way. The child actually is making progress but limited, and the parents are saying that the progress is due to the child’s own development and not because of…

Basic Elements of Motor Speech Therapy

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My male client is six and he has had phonological therapy for three years with another therapist. He was switched to me because he was going nowhere, and now he is going nowhere with me. I think he needs a motor approach but I have no idea how to begin. Can you guide me? Yours is a very common dilemma: You have tried basic phonological therapy that is auditory/cognitive/linguistic in nature and found that your client is not doing…

Diagnosing Apraxia in Toddlers

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I received a referral for a 15-month-old diagnosed by a private SLP with apraxia. The child has excellent receptive language and produces 10-15 words. I was told that the child was an “automatic qualifier” coming in with the diagnosis of apraxia. I have huge reservations with this and do not feel as if the diagnosis was made appropriately in just in one session and not over time. There are no indications of motor difficulties elsewhere. Am I out in…

Perpetual Lip Retraction / Smile

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My 6-year-old male client keeps his lips in a perpetual smile that is interfering with intelligibility when he speaks. He appears to have low muscle tone. He also has great difficulty producing multisyllabic words. I am wondering where to begin? Your client has lip retraction associated with mild dysarthria. How do I know he has dysarthria? Because he has speech distortion related to neuromuscular disturbance.  That is the very definition of dysarthria. I have written the following about lip…

Suggestions for Severe Non-verbal Client

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My male client is age 6. He has average intelligence, CP, and cleft palate. He was pre-mature and is non-verbal. He has been using an iPad with communication app “Words for Life” very successfully. He drools, can’t blow, barely moves his mouth, etc. He makes random vocalizations. Any ideas? This child represents some of the most severe we see.  This is severe apraxia and dysarthria, with cleft palate thrown in just to make it interesting. Let us state bluntly…

Discussing Diagnosis with Parents and Kids

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I have a five-year-old male client who slurs and I think this is mild dysarthria. Do you tell parents the diagnosis? Do you tell them that this is a lifelong problem? I usually don’t bring up dysarthria with a little guy who only slurs unless I need to assign a code for insurance, if the parents are pushing for a label, or if the parents already are bringing up apraxia or some other label as a possibility. Mild dysarthria…

Slurred Speech, Epenthesis

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My male client is five years of age. He has developmental artic errors and slurred speech. He also add a schwa at the ends of words: “Baby” is “baby-uh” and “Sand” is “Sand-uh.” What would account for this and how would you address this kind of speech sound error? Developmental errors are normal in a five year old but slurred speech is not. Something is going on. This sounds like mild dysarthria. I see the addition of the schwa…

Dysarthria is Not a Simple Articulation Deficit

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I work with a 6th grade student who has myotonic dystrophy. This is my 5th year working with this student. We have been working on P, B, and M for all of that time. At this time he can say these sounds correctly much of the time in therapy but has a horrible time with carry-over and self monitoring. He refuses to use video or voice recording or a mirror to help with this. Any thoughts on how I…

Apraxia Uncovered and Autism

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I have a 5-year-old child with PDD, NOS (autism spectrum disorder). Her language comprehension is very good. She makes sounds and she babbles, but she produces no words. She is social and definitely has communicative interest and intent. Based on your experience, would the techniques in your book and CD called Apraxia Uncovered be of potential benefit to my daughter to help her speak words (even though she does not carry a diagnosis of Apraxia, per se). Thank you…

Is Down Syndrome Apraxia?

By Pam Marshalla

Q: Everyone seems to say that kids with Down Syndrome have apraxia. Is this right? Shouldn’t it be dysarthria? Any client with a speech problem and neuromuscular disorder has dysarthria.  Period.  That is the very definition of dysarthria. Dysarthria is a non-linguistic, neuromuscular disorder of expressive speech, characterized by impaired capacity to execute speech movements. Dysarthria defines a group of motor speech disorders that includes clients with muscle tone disturbance–– Low tone, high tone, mixed tone, fluctuating tone; It includes…