Guest guest Posted December 1, 2006 Report Share Posted December 1, 2006 Hi, I was very confused yesterday as i see my apraxic son's issue to be about word retrieval. But it seems that " word retrieval " is seen as a something different and seen as 'worse' along with CAPD. I say 'worse' because... and i am reading between the lines here... perhaps it's not as 'curable' as apraxia. Finally, after thinking hard, i have decided it's a question of semantics. put this very well to me and summed up what i see as my son's word retrieval issue. " So word retrieval is motor planning in that the brain cannot find the pathways to access the word? " This is how i see it with my son. I guess the most important fact i cling to (!) is that once the pathway has been established the word is retrievable. certainly someone mentioned that their SLP saw 'word retrieval' as something different from apraxia and I can understand 's point of view. However, for some of us, word retrieval is the biggest issue and definately a " motor planning in that the brain cannot find the pathways to access the word " is too long to write as a description. Since I joined this group, some months ago, I have found it to be extremely useful with information. My son is not a 'cherub' as he doesn't have all the manifestations of apraxia, he doesn't have hypotonia and he doesn't have oral motor problems. In addition he is deaf with a cochlear implant so the diagnosis was even harder because language would be delayed in his case anyway. He may also have other language disorders too, but with such a small language base it's not possible to tell. However, therapy etc for apraxia is helping and I feel more empowered because of this group and the diagnosis than ever before. regards michelle UK mummy to james 8 and rory 6 both deaf, rory has verbal dyspraxia [ ] Word retrieval or speech impairment? Word retrieval may be easy to diagnose in a patient with Alzheimer's or Parkinson's Disease who doesn't have a speech impairment. But there is not enough research in preschool or early elementary school aged verbal disabled children to definitely state that the child that does not say a word or the right word on command has word retrieval issues and that the problem instead is not a speech/motor planning problem. They are different diagnosis and treatments...and one I believe comes with a greater stigma -word retrieval. To me saying a preschool child with a speech impairment has word-retrieval issues is like saying a child with a hearing impairment has CAPD because he has trouble understanding verbal commands. I don't care if Dr. Hall did a study with 5 children,,,,to decide that apraxia and word retrieval issues may go together and this was confirmed by follow up of 2 of those 5 children http://eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/Home.portal? _nfpb=true & _pageLabel=RecordDetails & ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED288 283 & ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno & objectId=0900000b80041e57 Below I have a study with about the same amout of children that disputes this with nonverbal autistic children. As almost always the ones that stand up for the children are the parents of those children. Not that long ago all " believed " the hearing impaired were " dummies " or retarded. http://deafness.about.com/cs/featurearticles/a/retarded_2.htm I bet this group could prove what I am saying on anecdotal stories of following verbal disabled children that are misdiagnosed but where the parents didn't allow the diagnosis they knew was false and fought it. Test those children at 9 or 10 -test my son Tanner today for example. Those who didn't believe in him didn't have a chance to destroy his confidence or chance to succeed because we didn't let them. I'm happy to know he proved them wrong but not happy to know some of you may believe he is somehow different. Tanner is very typical of most apraxic children in our group. Not all children with apraxia have phenomenal memories...and not all have average or above average IQs...it does appear most like Tanner do however. I too am sorry for those that don't fall into that group but no matter what there is always hope. I can tell you that perhaps I am such a strong advocate for not allowing this label to be placed on a child unless all are 100% sure...and that would be down the road not preschool age..because some unknowledgeable SLPs tried to diagnose Tanner with word-retrieval problems and receptive issues back when he was transitioning to kindergarten and they were " positive " he " wouldn't make it in mainstream kindergarten " They were wrong and as many of you know Tanner was a top student and in the 3rd grade had some bumps due to ignorance but still maintained a low B average and tested private to have 5th grade abilities in a number of academic areas including math. I believe in my heart and have said before and stand by that if I let " them " who didn't believe in Tanner, lead Tanner's direction, that 'they' would be right. Where would Tina's son be who all believed MR if her and her husband didn't stand by him while all disagreed. Again her example came at a perfect time. Don't feel guilty if you are one of the parents that has that diagnoses and you up till this moment believe or believed it...it's never too late to question it. At preschool age and at the early elementary school years we help create who they become later in life. Who knows if it's ever too late -look at who was misdiagnosed all her life and started to get appropriate therapy and help and started to talk for the first time at 17 and one of the first things she typed on the computer was " I am not retarded " . http://www.cherab.org/news/.html (Hi Robin and !!) When will reading what I am trying to say really be more harsh when you have time to still fix it or ten years or more from now? I appear to have trouble getting my point through, so I just hope some of you do hear me -because it will at least help save your children from falling into possible false diagnosis. Here's one study that may be of interest: Failure to confirm the word-retrieval problem hypothesis in facilitated communication Journal Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders Publisher Springer Netherlands ISSN 0162-3257 (Print) 1573-3432 (Online) Subject Behavioral Science Issue Volume 25, Number 6 / December, 1995 DOI 10.1007/BF02178190 Pages 597-610 Online Date Friday, September 30, 2005 Carol A. Vázquez1 (1) Psychology Department, State University of New York, 314 Faculty Tower, 12561-2499 New Paltz, New York Résumé / Abstract Two hypotheses were raised and empirically tested to account for the failure of previous controlled validation studies to find evidence of literacy in nonspeaking persons with autism using facilitated communication : (a) The naming tasks used in other studies have triggered specific word retrieval problems, or anomia, and ( a perceptual problem, visual agnosia, prevents subjects from recognizing objects without touching them. Three nonspeaking autistic children who had used facilitation for at least 2 years were evaluated with four experimentally controlled tasks, over a period of 5 months. In descriptive and object handling tasks, and in a traditional picture identification task subjects failed to type correct answers when facilitators were blind ; one subject, however, occasionally engaged in signing and vocalizations that were context- appropriate. Results reflected a generalized language deficit, rather than isolated word-finding or perceptual difficulties, and were consistent with many previous studies revealing facilitator cuing. Questions are raised about inconsistencies in pseudo-correct scores, a measure of facilitator influence, reported here and in previous research. http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN & cpsidt=2935229 Three nonspeaking children with autism who had used facilitated communication were evaluated with four experimentally controlled tasks. Findings suggested a generalized language deficit, rather than isolated word-finding or perceptual difficulties, and were consistent with previous studies revealing facilitator cuing. Questions are raised about inconsistencies in pseudocorrect scores, a measure of facilitator influence. (Author/DB) http://www.eric.ed.gov/sitemap/html_0900000b80021b70.html ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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