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Oral Diadochokinesis in Neurological Dysarthrias
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1995
Year
Speech KinematicsNeurological DisorderPathological SpeechSpeech Sound DisorderMedian Syllable DurationRapid Syllable RepetitionsNeurobiology Of DiseasePhoneticsNeurologySpeech Motor ControlOral DiadochokinesisNeuropathologyMotor DisorderHealth SciencesRehabilitationMotor SpeechNeuroscienceMinor Motor DeficitsSpeech PerceptionMedicine
Rapid syllable repetitions require alternating articulatory movements and, thus, provide a test for oral diadochokinesis. The present study performed an acoustic analysis of rapid syllable repetitions in patients suffering from idiopathic Parkinson's disease (n = 17), Huntington's chorea (n = 14), Friedreich's ataxia (n = 9), or from a purely cerebellar syndrome (n = 13). Four parameters were considered: the mean number of syllables per train, the median syllable duration with its variation coefficient, and articulatory imprecision in terms of the percentage of incomplete closures. Apart from a few subjects with minor motor deficits only, in all patients at least one of the four measures of diadochokinesis exceeded the normal range. Accordingly, discriminant analysis revealed a highly significant difference between controls and patients with respect to the considered parameters. Thus, oral diadochokinesis tasks represent a sensitive measure of orofacial motor impairment. Moreover, multivariate analysis showed that Parkinson's disease and Friedreich's ataxia are characterized by a highly specific profile of diadochokinesis performance.