Clinicoanatomic Studies in Dysarthria

Author:

Kent Ray D.12,Duffy Joseph R.3,Slama Angela1,Kent Jane F.1,Clift Amy4

Affiliation:

1. University of Wisconsin-Madison

2. Waisman Center Room 435, University of Wisconsin–Madison, 1500 Highland Avenue, Madison, WI 53705-2280

3. Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN

4. Southwest Missouri State University Springfield

Abstract

More than 30 years ago, Darley, Aronson, and Brown (1969) proposed clinicoanatomic correlations for seven perceptual types of dysarthria. These correlations have not been systematically re-examined even though imaging technologies developed in recent years provide the means to do so. This review considers data from published imaging studies as well as data from selected medical interventions to evaluate the current state of knowledge that relates lesion site to the nature of a speech disturbance. Although the extant data are not sufficient to allow a complete evaluation of the seven types of dysarthria described by Darley et al., relevant information has been reported on lesions of the pyramidal pathway, extrapyramidal pathway, and cerebellum. In general, the results are best explained by an equivalence mode of brain-behavior relationship in which a type of dysarthria is associated with a lesion in one of two or more brain structures. Criteria also are proposed for future studies of clinicoanatomic relationships in neurogenic communication disorders.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference152 articles.

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4. Infarction in the anterior rostral cerebellum (the territory of the lateral branch of the superior cerebellar artery);Amarenco P.;Neurology,1991

5. Hemorrhagic lacunar stroke;Arboix A.;Cere-brovascular Diseases,2000

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