There are three different levels of classification when determining the magnitude and type of a speech disorder and the proper treatment or therapy: • Sounds the patient can produce • Phonemic – can be produced easily; used meaningfully and constructively • Phonetic – produced only upon request; not used consistently, meaningfully, or constructively; not used in connected speech • Stimulate sounds • Easily stimulated • Stimulate after demonstration and probing (i.e. with a tongue depressor) • Cannot produce the sound • Cannot be produced voluntarily • No production ever observed
Types of disorder •
Aphasia •
Apraxia of speech may result from stroke or progressive illness, and involves inconsistent production of speech sounds and rearranging of sounds in a word ("potato" may become "topato" and next "totapo"). Production of words becomes more difficult with effort, but common phrases may sometimes be spoken spontaneously without effort. •
Cluttering, a speech and fluency disorder characterized primarily by a rapid rate of speech, which makes speech difficult to understand. •
Developmental verbal dyspraxia also known as childhood apraxia of speech. •
Dysarthria is a weakness or paralysis of speech muscles caused by damage to the nerves or brain. Dysarthria is often caused by
strokes,
Parkinson's disease,
ALS, head or neck injuries, surgical accident, or
cerebral palsy. •
Dysprosody is an extremely rare neurological speech disorder. It is characterized by alterations in intensity, in the timing of utterance segments, and in rhythm, cadence, and intonation of words. The changes to the duration, the
fundamental frequency, and the intensity of tonic and atonic syllables of the sentences spoken, deprive an individual's particular speech of its characteristics. The cause of dysprosody is usually associated with neurological pathologies such as
brain vascular accidents, cranioencephalic traumatisms, and
brain tumors. •
Lisps •
Muteness is the complete inability to speak. •
Speech sound disorders involve difficulty in producing specific speech sounds (most often certain consonants, such as /s/ or /r/), and are subdivided into
articulation disorders (also called phonetic disorders) and
phonemic disorders. Articulation disorders are characterized by difficulty learning to produce sounds physically. Phonemic disorders are characterized by difficulty in learning the sound distinctions of a language, so that one sound may be used in place of many. However, it is not uncommon for a single person to have a mixed speech sound disorder with both phonemic and phonetic components. •
Stuttering (AKA dysphemia) affects approximately 1% of the adult population. •
Voice disorders are impairments, often physical, that involve the function of the
larynx or vocal resonance. ==Causes==