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Nonspeech movements have a broad spectrum of clinical applications, including developmental speech and language disorders, motor speech disorders, feeding and swallowing difficulties, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, trismus, and tardive stereotypies.
- Tongue Strength in Children With and Without Speech Sound Disorders
This study assesses the largest published comparative...
- Tongue Strength in Children With and Without Speech Sound Disorders
25 lip 2023 · Oral motor deficits refer to difficulties in the muscles and structures involved in oral movements. These deficits can manifest in various ways, affecting speech, feeding, swallowing, and overall oral coordination.
The role and benefit of nonspeech oral movements are controversial in many oral motor disorders. It is argued that the clinical value of these movements can be elucidated through careful definitions and task descriptions such as those proposed in this review article.
28 lut 2019 · This study assesses the largest published comparative database for pediatric tongue strength and will provide a foundation for comparing swallow pressures to tongue strength in children with and without swallowing disorders.
It has been designed to identify clinically children who have oral motor problems, by providing developmental norms, and to inform the development of goals for intervention. It assesses 4 domains—jaw, tongue, and lip movements and speech.
27 sty 2020 · Speech Sound Disorders (SSDs) is a generic term used to describe a range of difficulties producing speech sounds in children (McLeod and Baker, 2017).
29 lip 2022 · Movement disorders of the mouth encompass a spectrum of hyperactive movements involving the muscles of the orofacial complex. They are rare conditions and are described in the literature primarily in case reports originating from neurologists, psychiatrists, and the dental community.