Kuruvilla-Dugdale Mili, Mefferd Antje
Department of Communication Science and Disorders, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, United States.
Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States.
J Commun Disord. 2017 May;67:22-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jcomdis.2017.05.002. Epub 2017 May 10.
Although it is frequently presumed that bulbar muscle degeneration in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is associated with progressive loss of speech motor control, empirical evidence is limited. Furthermore, because speaking rate slows with disease progression and rate manipulations are used to improve intelligibility in ALS, this study sought to (i) determine between and within-group differences in articulatory motor control as a result of speaking rate changes and (ii) identify the strength of association between articulatory motor control and speech impairment severity.
Ten talkers with ALS and 11 healthy controls repeated the target sentence at habitual, fast, and slow rates. The spatiotemporal variability index (STI) was calculated to determine tongue, lower lip, and jaw movement variability.
During habitual speech, talkers with mild-moderate dysarthria displayed significantly lower tongue and lip movement variability whereas those with severe dysarthria showed greater variability compared to controls. Within-group rate effects were significant only for talkers with ALS. Specifically, lip and tongue movement variability significantly increased during slow speech relative to habitual and fast speech. Finally, preliminary associations between speech impairment severity and movement variability were moderate to strong in talkers with ALS.
Between-group differences for habitual speech and within-group effects for slow speech replicated previous findings for lower lip and jaw movements. Preliminary findings of moderate to strong associations between speech impairment severity and STI suggest that articulatory variability may vary from pathologically low (possibly indicating articulatory compensation) to pathologically high variability (possibly indicating loss of control) with dysarthria progression in ALS.
尽管人们常常认为肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)中的延髓肌肉变性与言语运动控制的逐渐丧失有关,但实证证据有限。此外,由于随着疾病进展说话速度会减慢,并且语速调整被用于改善ALS患者的言语清晰度,本研究旨在(i)确定由于语速变化导致的发音运动控制在组间和组内的差异,以及(ii)确定发音运动控制与言语障碍严重程度之间的关联强度。
10名患有ALS的讲话者和11名健康对照者以习惯语速、快速和慢速重复目标句子。计算时空变异性指数(STI)以确定舌头、下唇和下颌运动的变异性。
在习惯性言语期间,患有轻中度构音障碍的讲话者舌头和嘴唇运动的变异性显著降低,而与对照组相比,患有严重构音障碍的讲话者表现出更大的变异性。组内语速效应仅在患有ALS的讲话者中显著。具体而言,相对于习惯性语速和快速语速,慢速言语期间嘴唇和舌头运动的变异性显著增加。最后,在患有ALS的讲话者中,言语障碍严重程度与运动变异性之间的初步关联为中度至强关联。
习惯性言语的组间差异和慢速言语的组内效应重复了先前关于下唇和下颌运动的研究结果。言语障碍严重程度与STI之间中度至强关联的初步发现表明,随着ALS构音障碍的进展,发音变异性可能从病理性低(可能表明发音补偿)到病理性高变异性(可能表明控制丧失)不等。