评估舌头无力和疲劳。

Nancy Pearl Solomon
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摘要

对舌头的非语言功能进行评估是言语语言病理学的常见方法。本文回顾了用于测定舌头强度和耐力的技术,并介绍了一种持续努力任务。这些技术旨在揭示和量化舌头的弱点或疲劳。本文考虑了在使用或不使用固定下颌位置的咬合块的情况下执行这些任务的后果。另一个值得关注的话题是,非言语性舌头损伤是否与帕金森病患者的言语功能障碍有关。过去的研究表明,帕金森病患者的舌头力量和耐力减弱,但这些测量结果与言语测量结果并不相关。据推测,舌头的无力和疲劳需要达到 "临界 "水平,才会对言语产生明显影响。为了研究实验诱导的舌头疲劳是否会影响说话,正常说话者进行了长时间的舌头剧烈运动。在这些运动之后,说话能力有所下降。一项新的调查研究了 1 小时类似语言的舌头运动(快速音节重复)是否会影响发音障碍。来自 6 名帕金森病患者、1 名肌肉萎缩性侧索硬化症患者和 6 名神经正常对照组受试者的初步数据显示,练习后句子听起来更准确,但不那么自然。令人惊讶的是,各组之间的结果并无明显差异。继续收集数据和改进任务将有助于我们理解虚弱、疲劳和言语之间的潜在关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessment of tongue weakness and fatigue.

Assessment of nonspeech tongue function is common in speech-language pathology. This paper reviews techniques used to determine tongue strength and endurance, and describes a constant-effort task. These techniques are intended to reveal and quantify the presence of weakness or fatigue of the tongue. The consequences of performing these tasks with and without a bite block, used to fix jaw position, are considered. Whether nonspeech tongue impairment is associated with speech dysfunction in Parkinson's disease is another topic of interest. Past studies indicated reduced tongue strength and endurance in Parkinson's disease, but these measures did not correlate with speech measures. It was hypothesized that weakness and fatigue need to be impaired to a "critical" level before speech is perceptibly affected. To examine whether experimentally induced tongue fatigue affects speech, normal speakers performed prolonged strenuous tongue exercise. Speech deteriorated following these exercises. A new investigation examines whether 1 hour of speech-like tongue exercise (rapid syllable repetitions) affects dysarthric speech. Preliminary data from 6 participants with Parkinson's disease, 1 person with bulbar ALS, and 6 neurologically normal control subjects indicate that sentences sound more precise but less natural after the exercises. Surprisingly, results did not differ significantly between the groups. Continued collection of data and refinement of tasks will contribute to our understanding of the potential relationships between weakness, fatigue, and speech.

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