Educational and Professional Studies, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2010 Nov-Dec;45(6):617-29. doi: 10.3109/13682820903470577.
Non-speech oro-motor exercises (NSOMExs) are described in speech and language therapy manuals and are thought to be much used in acquired dysarthria intervention, though there is no robust evidence of an influence on speech outcome. Opinions differ as to whether, and for which dysarthria presentations, NSOMExs are appropriate.
The investigation sought to collect development-phase data, in accordance with the Medical Research Council (MRC) evaluation of complex interventions. The aims were to establish the extent of use of NSOMExs in acquired disorders, the exercise regimes in use for dysarthria, with which dysarthric populations, and the anticipated clinical outcomes. A further aim was to determine the influencing rationales where NSOMExs were or were not used in dysarthria intervention.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Speech and language therapists throughout Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, working with adult-acquired dysarthria, were identified by their service heads. They received postal questionnaires comprising 21 closed and two open questions, covering respondent biographics, use of NSOMExs, anticipated clinical outcomes, and practice influencing rationales.
OUTCOME & RESULTS: One hundred and ninety-one (56% response) completed questionnaires were returned. Eighty-one per cent of respondents used NSOMExs in dysarthria. There was no association with years of speech and language therapy experience. Those who used and those who did not use NSOMExs provided similar influencing rationales, including evidence from their own practice, and Higher Education Institute teaching. More experienced speech and language therapists were more likely than those more recently qualified to be guided by results from their own practice. Input from the attended Higher Education Institute was more influential for those less experienced than for those more experienced. Clinical outcome aims were not confined to speech, but also included improvements in movement, sensory awareness, appearance, emotional status, dysphagia and drooling. NSOMExs were used with many neurological disorders, especially stroke, all dysarthria classes, especially flaccid, and all severity levels. Tongue and lip exercises were more frequent than face, jaw and soft palate. The most common regimes were four to six repetitions of each exercise, during three practice periods daily, each of 6–10 min.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: NSOMExs are a frequent component of dysarthria management in the UK-devolved government countries. This confirmation, along with the details of speech and language therapy practice, provides a foundation for clinical research which will compare outcomes for people with dysarthria, whose management includes and does not include NSOMExs. Speech and language therapy practice may be guided by evidence that speech outcome is or is not affected by NSOMExs.
非言语口颌运动练习(NSOMExs)在言语和语言治疗手册中有所描述,被认为在获得性构音障碍干预中被广泛应用,尽管其对言语结果的影响没有确凿的证据。对于 NSOMExs 是否以及对于哪些构音障碍表现是合适的,意见不一。
本研究旨在根据医学研究委员会(MRC)对复杂干预措施的评估,收集发展阶段的数据。目的是确定 NSOMExs 在获得性疾病中的使用程度、用于构音障碍的运动方案、用于哪些构音障碍人群以及预期的临床结果。另一个目的是确定在构音障碍干预中使用和不使用 NSOMExs 的影响因素。
通过服务负责人确定了苏格兰、威尔士和北爱尔兰的从事成人获得性构音障碍的言语和语言治疗师。他们收到了包含 21 个封闭问题和两个开放问题的邮寄问卷,涵盖了受访者的生物特征、NSOMExs 的使用、预期的临床结果和实践影响因素。
191 名(56%的回复率)完成了问卷。81%的受访者在构音障碍中使用 NSOMExs。与言语和语言治疗经验的年限无关。使用和不使用 NSOMExs 的人提供了类似的影响因素,包括来自他们自己的实践和高等教育机构教学的证据。经验更丰富的言语和语言治疗师比最近刚获得资格的治疗师更有可能根据自己的实践结果来指导。参加的高等教育机构的投入对经验较少的人比经验较多的人更有影响力。临床结果目标不仅限于言语,还包括运动、感觉意识、外观、情绪状态、吞咽困难和流涎的改善。NSOMExs 用于许多神经疾病,特别是中风,所有构音障碍类型,特别是弛缓型,以及所有严重程度水平。舌头和嘴唇练习比面部、下颌和软腭更频繁。最常见的方案是每天练习三次,每次练习 6-10 分钟,每个练习重复 4-6 次。
NSOMExs 是英国联合王国政府国家构音障碍管理的常见组成部分。这一确认以及言语和语言治疗实践的细节为临床研究提供了基础,该研究将比较包括和不包括 NSOMExs 的管理对构音障碍患者的结果。言语和语言治疗实践可能受到以下因素的影响:言语结果是否受到 NSOMExs 的影响。