Guest guest Posted February 8, 2004 Report Share Posted February 8, 2004 Wondering myself, I did an ASK JEEVES, and I am copying and pasting. What is the difference between apraxia and dyspraxia? Apraxia refers to the inability to coordinate thought and movement, while dyspraxia is less severe, referring to difficulty coordinating thought and movement. [ ] Apraxia or Dyspraxia ???????? Hi, Can someone tell me the difference between dyspraxia and apraxia. Thank you, Ginny Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 8, 2004 Report Share Posted February 8, 2004 Hi Ginny! Here is an archive of an archive answer for this question: " And for the person that asked about apraxia/dyspraxia. Yes in theory there is a difference in what the names mean -which sounds nice in theory -but doesn't work like that in reality which is where we are all supposed to live (except in Disney) 's definition and answer was excellent on this. Here is another archive that sums it up: " Deborah is right overall -however apraxia/dyspraxia in the US is the reversible diagnosis -a child can be diagnosed with dyspraxia 'or' apraxia, and to many professionals in the US it means the same thing. In fact Tanner's first SLP diagnosis of apraxia was " I believe Tanner has apraxia -or dyspraxia -they mean the same thing " and when I asked her to spell that so I could look it up she wrote on a little yellow stickie paper for me " dyspraxia apraxia " I read all the " definitions " of apraxia or dyspraxia, including how one means motor planning problems of the body -but can affect speech " dyspraxia " and one means motor planning problems of speech which can affect body movement " apraxia " which sounded the same to me but I'm not an expert (and the craziness of those who then add words like " of speech " after and/or " childhood " or " developmental " in front of apraxia/dyspraxia, which makes it even more confusing since it implies that once your child grows to become a teenager and then an adult he will need to keep updating his diagnosis, and that if it also affects the body you need to say CASAB childhood apraxia of speech and of body, TASAB teenage apraxia of speech and of body, and then of course your child's grows old enough for AASAB...well you get the point!) (links for two who grew up with apraxia since childhood - an apraxic teen and an apraxic adult) http://www.cherab.org/news/.html http://www.cherab.org/news/.html ) Children with apraxia and dysarthria are quite different. It is common, however, to confuse apraxia and dysarthria, says Dr. , chief of child development at the Chicago College of Medicine. While experts are able to differentiate between these two neurological disorders, he says, " These disorders are poorly understood by physicians and by a lot of speech therapists as well. " A further complication is the possibility of phonological disorders, apraxia, and dysarthria occurring together in the same child. Language disorders may also be present. And the severity of each may vary. " http://www.cherab.org/information/latetalkerhandout.html In short to know for sure what the diagnosis means -check with the person that diagnosed your child and ask them to clarify! Once the medical communities pick up the diagnosis of apraxia for once this craziness will end! (and yes we are working hard at trying to make this a reality!) " ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 9, 2004 Report Share Posted February 9, 2004 Wow - Your son sounds a lot like my 6 year old son now. He has overcome so much and everyone around him thinks he is " cured. " I, however, see how he copes with things everyday and still has to work so much harder than the other children in his class. He is in mainstream first grade and doing great, but that is due to his hard work, practice, patience and his coping skills he has mastered with his sensory issues. I would love to keep up with you since our boys are around the same age and seem to both be heading into the next phase..... The unknown is so scary!! North Carolina Re: [ ] Re: Apraxia or Dyspraxia ???????? Hi Tell me about confusing. I have been told dysarthria with apraxic tendencies, also hypotonia, motor planning disorder. My son is 5 1/2 and when I look back over his 5 plus years, I look at it like this, before he had speech he had apraxia of speech-up until his language fully came in at 3.5-4. His speech developed but his motor planning in his body didn't, so now he had dyspraxia, I worked on that wiht him, now all said he was fine just not an athelete. Now that he is almost 6 but still speaks like 3-4 year old, now we are back to the apraxia again, dysarthria. But the therapy for dysarthria isn't making any improvement in his articulation. Now they think it might be oral sensory problem. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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