Kumin Libby
Loyola College, Department of Speech-Language Pathology, Baltimore 21210-2699, USA.
Downs Syndr Res Pract. 2006 Jul;10(1):10-22. doi: 10.3104/reports.301.
Many children with Down syndrome have difficulty with speech intelligibility. The present study used a parent survey to learn more about a specific factor that affects speech intelligibility, i.e. childhood verbal apraxia. One of the factors that affects speech intelligibility for children with Down syndrome is difficulty with voluntarily programming, combining, organising, and sequencing the movements necessary for speech. Historically, this difficulty, childhood verbal apraxia, has not been identified or treated in children with Down syndrome but recent research has documented that symptoms of childhood verbal apraxia can be found in children with Down syndrome. The survey examined whether and to what extent childhood verbal apraxia is currently being identified and treated in children with Down syndrome. The survey then asked parents to identify certain speech characteristics that occur always, frequently, sometimes or never in their child's everyday speech. There were 1620 surveys received. Survey results indicated that approximately 15% of the parents responding to the survey had been told that their child has childhood verbal apraxia. Examination of the everyday speech characteristics identified by the parents indicated that many more children are showing clinical symptoms of childhood verbal apraxia although they have not been given that diagnosis. The most common characteristics displayed by the subjects included decreased intelligibility with increased length of utterance, inconsistency of speech errors, difficulty sequencing oral movements and sounds, and a pattern of receptive language superior to expressive language. The survey also examined the impact of childhood verbal apraxia on speech intelligibility. Results indicated that children with Down syndrome who have clinical symptoms of childhood verbal apraxia have more difficulty with speech intelligibility, i.e. there was a significant correlation between childhood verbal apraxia and parental intelligibility ratings. Children with apraxia often do not begin to speak until after age 5. There was a significant correlation between speech intelligibility and age at which the child began to speak, i.e. children who began to speak after age 5 had lower parental intelligibility ratings. A diagnosis of difficulty with oral motor skills is more frequently given than a diagnosis of apraxia; 60.2% of parents had been given this diagnosis. According to survey results, it is rare (2%) for a diagnosis of childhood verbal apraxia to be made without a diagnosis of difficulty with oral motor skills.
许多唐氏综合征患儿在言语清晰度方面存在困难。本研究通过家长调查问卷,以进一步了解影响言语清晰度的一个特定因素,即儿童言语失用症。影响唐氏综合征患儿言语清晰度的因素之一是在自主规划、组合、组织和排序言语所需动作方面存在困难。从历史上看,唐氏综合征患儿的这种困难,即儿童言语失用症,一直未被识别或治疗,但最近的研究表明,唐氏综合征患儿中可发现儿童言语失用症的症状。该调查研究了目前唐氏综合征患儿的儿童言语失用症是否以及在何种程度上得到识别和治疗。然后,该调查要求家长确定某些在孩子日常言语中总是、经常、有时或从不出现的言语特征。共收到1620份调查问卷。调查结果表明,约15%回复调查的家长被告知他们的孩子患有儿童言语失用症。对家长所确定的日常言语特征进行检查后发现,尽管许多孩子未被诊断出患有儿童言语失用症,但他们表现出了更多该病症的临床症状。受试者表现出的最常见特征包括随着话语长度增加清晰度下降、言语错误不一致、口腔动作和声音排序困难,以及接受性语言优于表达性语言的模式。该调查还研究了儿童言语失用症对言语清晰度的影响。结果表明,有儿童言语失用症临床症状的唐氏综合征患儿在言语清晰度方面存在更大困难,即儿童言语失用症与家长对孩子言语清晰度的评分之间存在显著相关性。患有失用症的儿童通常直到五岁以后才开始说话。言语清晰度与儿童开始说话的年龄之间存在显著相关性,即五岁以后开始说话的儿童,家长对其言语清晰度的评分较低。与失用症诊断相比,口腔运动技能困难的诊断更为常见;60.2%的家长收到过这一诊断。根据调查结果,在未诊断出口腔运动技能困难的情况下,很少(2%)会诊断出儿童言语失用症。