Effects of body position and sex group on tongue pressure generation.

Angela M Dietsch, Carmen M Cirstea, Ed T Auer, Jeff P Searl
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Abstract

Fine control of orofacial musculature is necessary to precisely accelerate and decelerate the articulators across exact distances for functional speech and coordinated swallows (Amerman & Parnell, 1990; Benjamin, 1997; Kent, Duffy, Slama, Kent, & Clift, 2001). Enhanced understanding of neural control for such movements could clarify the nature of and potential remediation for some dysarthrias and other orofacial myofunctional impairments. Numerous studies have measured orolingual force and accuracy during speech and nonspeech tasks, but have focused on young adults, maximum linguapalatal pressures, and upright positioning (O'Day, Frank, Montgomery, Nichols, & McDade, 2005; Solomon & Munson, 2004; Somodi, Robin, & Luschei, 1995; Youmans, Youmans, & Stierwalt, 2009). Patients' medical conditions or testing procedures such as concurrent neuroimaging may preclude fully upright positioning during oral motor assessments in some cases. Since judgments about lingual strength and coordination can influence clinical decisions regarding the functionality of swallowing and speech, it is imperative to understand any effects of body positioning differences. In addition, sex differences in the control of such tasks are not well defined. Therefore, this study evaluated whether pressures exerted during tongue movements differ in upright vs. supine body position in healthy middle-aged men and women. Twenty healthy middle-aged adults compressed small air-filled plastic bulbs in the oral cavity at predetermined fractions of task-specific peak pressure in a randomized block design. Tasks including phoneme repetitions and nonspeech isometric contractions were executed in upright and supine positions. Participants received continuous visual feedback regarding targets and actual exerted pressures. Analyses compared average pressure values for each subject, task, position, and effort level. Speech-like and nonspeech tongue pressures did not differ significantly across body position or sex groups. Pressure matching was significantly less accurate at higher percentages of maximum pressure for both tasks. These results provide preliminary comparative data for the clinical assessment of individuals with orofacial myofunctional and neurological disorders.

体位和性别对舌压产生的影响。
口腔面部肌肉组织的精细控制对于在准确的距离上精确地加速和减速发音器是必要的,以实现功能性语言和协调吞咽(Amerman & Parnell, 1990;本杰明,1997;Kent, Duffy, Slama, Kent, & cliff, 2001)。加强对这些运动的神经控制的理解可以澄清一些构音障碍和其他口面部肌功能障碍的性质和潜在的补救措施。许多研究测量了说话和非说话任务中的单语力量和准确性,但主要关注年轻人、最大舌压力和直立定位(O'Day, Frank, Montgomery, Nichols, & McDade, 2005;Solomon & Munson, 2004;Somodi, Robin, & Luschei, 1995;Youmans, Youmans, & Stierwalt, 2009)。在某些情况下,患者的身体状况或测试程序(如并发神经成像)可能会妨碍口腔运动评估时的完全直立定位。由于对语言力量和协调的判断可以影响吞咽和语言功能的临床决策,因此了解身体位置差异的任何影响是必要的。此外,在控制这些任务方面的性别差异还没有很好地界定。因此,本研究评估了健康中年男性和女性在直立和仰卧体位时舌头运动时施加的压力是否不同。在随机分组设计中,20名健康的中年成年人在任务特定峰值压力的预定分数下压缩口腔中的小型充气塑料球。包括音素重复和非语音等距收缩的任务在直立和仰卧位置执行。参与者收到了关于目标和实际施加压力的连续视觉反馈。分析比较了每个科目、任务、职位和努力水平的平均压力值。类语言和非语言舌头的压力在身体姿势或性别群体中没有显著差异。压力匹配在两项任务的最大压力百分比较高时,准确性明显降低。这些结果为面部肌功能障碍和神经障碍患者的临床评估提供了初步的比较数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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