Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 Dear Leighanne, The following is taken from a website: www.apraxia-kids.org " What is Childhood Apraxia of Speech? Childhood Apraxia of Speech is a motor speech disorder. For reasons not yet fully understood, children with apraxia of speech have great difficulty planning and producing the precise, highly refined and specific series of movements of the tongue, lips, jaw and palate that are necessary for intelligible speech. Apraxia of speech is sometimes called verbal apraxia, developmental apraxia of speech, or verbal dyspraxia. No matter what name is used, the most important concept is the root word " praxis. " Praxis means planned movement. To some degree or another, a child with the diagnosis of apraxia of speech has difficulty programming and planning speech movements. Apraxia of speech is a specific speech disorder. The act of speech begins with an intention to communicate. Next, an idea forms, outlining what the speaker wants to say. The words for the desired message are put in the correct order, using the correct grammar. Each of the words are comprised of a specific sequence of sounds (also called phonemes)and syllables that must be ordered together. All of this information is translated from an idea and information about order of sounds into a series of highly coordinated motor movements of the lips, tongue, jaw, and soft palate. The brain must tell the muscles of these " articulators " the exact order and timing of movements so that the words in the message are properly articulated. Finally, the muscles must work properly with enough strength and muscle tone to perform the movements needed for speech. In typically developing speech, children make word attempts and get feedback from others and from their own internal systems regarding how " well " the words they produced matched the ones that they wanted to produce. Children use this information the next time they attempt the words and essentially are able to " learn from experience. " Usually once syllables and words are spoken repeatedly, the speech motor act becomes automatic. Speech motor plans and programs are stored in the brain and can be accessed effortlessly when they are needed. Children with apraxia of speech have difficulty in this aspect of speech. It is believed that children with CAS may not be able to form or access speech motor plans and programs or that these plans and programs are faulty for some reason. " It will be good to get in to see the developmental ped. who will be able to offer you more wisdom or refer you to someone who can. How does your son make out with eating; does his lack of tongue movement also pose difficulties in this area? If there are no swallowing issues (or allergies), you may want to try sticky foods which can sometimes help to get the tongue and jaw in motion i.e. raisins and peanut-butter. Good-luck and let us know how your appointment goes. - Velvet > > I was just wandering what some of the " signs/symptoms " of apraxia are. I have been wondering if my son's really low oral motor skills and control could be associated with that. I was also wondering if apraxia could be why he can't move his tongue around hardly at all. I've asked his ST about this and she says it is a good possibility but that she couldn't and wouldn't diagnose him or say yes or no that that was what he might have. We go on the 7th of Febuary to see the Dev Ped and I'll be brining all of this up to her also. One last thing, does anyone know of a good website or book that has some good oral motor excercises and some good ways to get him to do them. He's 34 months old and we have a set of excercises to do right now, but getting him to do them is like pulling teeth sometimes. He wants to look at the page and the cat picture on it but that's as far as it goes. Even his ST has trouble getting him to do them for her. Well thanks everyone for the help and support during my > time of uncertanty. > > > Leighanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 This is from: www.apraxia.ca (a Canadian website called ECHO) Some symptoms that may indicate developmental apraxia of speech include: Little or no babbling as an infant Difficulty imitating sounds/words Very few consonant sounds Possibly limited vowel sounds as well Showing signs of frustration with inability to communicate Late onset of first words Uses grunts, gestures and other non-verbal forms of communication Leaves out sounds or substitutes incorrect sounds in words Often inconsistent or unpredictable speech errors Severely unclear speech or speech attempts May show groping with their mouth when attempting to speak Makes slow or no progress with traditional speech therapy > > > > > I was just wandering what some of the " signs/symptoms " of apraxia > are. > > Leighanne > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2006 Report Share Posted January 6, 2006 Velvet, The only problem has with his eating is that he over stuffs his mouth with food and then tries to swallow it all at once which usually (9 times out of 10) results in him choking. He usually gets it up or down on his own though. I'm not sure if this is because of his Sensory stuff or oral motor issues or just normal toddler behaviour. Thanks for the website info you provided also. Leighanne Velvet <johnvel@...> wrote: Dear Leighanne, The following is taken from a website: www.apraxia-kids.org " What is Childhood Apraxia of Speech? Childhood Apraxia of Speech is a motor speech disorder. For reasons not yet fully understood, children with apraxia of speech have great difficulty planning and producing the precise, highly refined and specific series of movements of the tongue, lips, jaw and palate that are necessary for intelligible speech. Apraxia of speech is sometimes called verbal apraxia, developmental apraxia of speech, or verbal dyspraxia. No matter what name is used, the most important concept is the root word " praxis. " Praxis means planned movement. To some degree or another, a child with the diagnosis of apraxia of speech has difficulty programming and planning speech movements. Apraxia of speech is a specific speech disorder. The act of speech begins with an intention to communicate. Next, an idea forms, outlining what the speaker wants to say. The words for the desired message are put in the correct order, using the correct grammar. Each of the words are comprised of a specific sequence of sounds (also called phonemes)and syllables that must be ordered together. All of this information is translated from an idea and information about order of sounds into a series of highly coordinated motor movements of the lips, tongue, jaw, and soft palate. The brain must tell the muscles of these " articulators " the exact order and timing of movements so that the words in the message are properly articulated. Finally, the muscles must work properly with enough strength and muscle tone to perform the movements needed for speech. In typically developing speech, children make word attempts and get feedback from others and from their own internal systems regarding how " well " the words they produced matched the ones that they wanted to produce. Children use this information the next time they attempt the words and essentially are able to " learn from experience. " Usually once syllables and words are spoken repeatedly, the speech motor act becomes automatic. Speech motor plans and programs are stored in the brain and can be accessed effortlessly when they are needed. Children with apraxia of speech have difficulty in this aspect of speech. It is believed that children with CAS may not be able to form or access speech motor plans and programs or that these plans and programs are faulty for some reason. " It will be good to get in to see the developmental ped. who will be able to offer you more wisdom or refer you to someone who can. How does your son make out with eating; does his lack of tongue movement also pose difficulties in this area? If there are no swallowing issues (or allergies), you may want to try sticky foods which can sometimes help to get the tongue and jaw in motion i.e. raisins and peanut-butter. Good-luck and let us know how your appointment goes. - Velvet > > I was just wandering what some of the " signs/symptoms " of apraxia are. I have been wondering if my son's really low oral motor skills and control could be associated with that. I was also wondering if apraxia could be why he can't move his tongue around hardly at all. I've asked his ST about this and she says it is a good possibility but that she couldn't and wouldn't diagnose him or say yes or no that that was what he might have. We go on the 7th of Febuary to see the Dev Ped and I'll be brining all of this up to her also. One last thing, does anyone know of a good website or book that has some good oral motor excercises and some good ways to get him to do them. He's 34 months old and we have a set of excercises to do right now, but getting him to do them is like pulling teeth sometimes. He wants to look at the page and the cat picture on it but that's as far as it goes. Even his ST has trouble getting him to do them for her. Well thanks everyone for the help and support during my > time of uncertanty. > > > Leighanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2006 Report Share Posted January 7, 2006 One last thing, does anyone know of a good website or book that has some good oral motor excercises and some good ways to get him to do them. He's 34 months old and we have a set of excercises to do right now, but getting him to do them is like pulling teeth sometimes. He wants to look at the page and the cat picture on it but that's as far as it goes. Even his ST has trouble getting him to do them for her. Well thanks everyone for the help and support during my time of uncertanty. Leighanne ********Hi Leighanne, what comes to my mind is to read him nursery rhymes that are especially silly. Read the rhyme in a sing song voice with lots of expression and exaggerated mouth movements. Then have him repeat the lines after you read a line.…Something like Higgelty piggelty POP, the mouse ran up the CLOCK, the clock struck ONE and down he RUN, HIGGELTY, PIGGELTY POP! My son loved this rhyme. Also, lots of Dr. Seuss would be good for this. One Fish, Two Fish, red fish, blue fish (something like that)… I’d go for the nursery rhymes and you could get your son’s stuffed animals involved……….Gail ,13 Photos Ring in the New Year with Photo Calendars. Add photos, events, holidays, whatever. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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