dysarthria in English

noun
1
difficult or unclear articulation of speech that is otherwise linguistically normal.
Functional deficits in tongue movement contribute to a host of disorders, including obstructive sleep apnea, dysarthria , and dysphagia.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "dysarthria" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dysarthria", or refer to the context using the word "dysarthria" in the English Dictionary.

1. Burghemot Dysarthria and dysphagia following treatment failure

2. Bradycardia dysarthria, hypoaesthesia, sensory disturbance miosis, visual acuity reduced dyspnoea, wheezing

3. Troyer syndrome is characterized by progressive spastic paraparesis, dysarthria, pseudobulbar palsy, distal Amyotrophy, short stature, and subtle skeletal abnormalities

4. Patients with Bulbar amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are often referred to the otolaryngologist/head and neck surgeon and speech pathologist for evaluation and management of dysphagia and dysarthria

5. Symptomatic Amorisis fugax, Unilateral Weakness (Paresis), Numbness, Aphasia, dysphasia, Hemianopsia Loss of Consciouness, Cortical blindness, Dizziness, Ataxia, Dysarthria Dizziness, syncope, headache confusion Patient Presentation Anterior Posterior Non- localizing

6. The neurologic findings of movement disorder (Blepharospasm, grimacing, facial and neck dystonia, tremors, chorea) and ataxia (gait ataxia, dysarthria) correspond to regions of iron deposition in the brain

7. Signs and symptoms Very common symptoms in overdose (> # % incidence) include tachycardia, agitation/aggressiveness, dysarthria, various extrapyramidal symptoms, and reduced level of consciousness ranging from sedation to coma

8. According to the lesion sites and the severity of the speech impairments, it is identified 6 types of dysarthria: spastic, flaccid, mixed spastic-flaccid, ataxic, hypokinetic, and hyperkinetic.

9. This Bulbar weakness — named for the nerves that originate from the bulblike part of the brainstem — can cause difficulty with talking (dysarthria), chewing, swallowing (dysphagia), and holding up the head

10. Unlike in dysarthria where these muscles are weakened or even paralyzed, Apraxia impacts on the brain’s ability to send signals to the muscles, so thoughts are not always correctly translated into speech

11. The last lithium intoxication, 3 years prior to death was during a low-dosage therapy with normal lithium levels followed by severe lasting impairment: akinesia, rigidity, dysarthria, ataxia, and an organic alteration in character.

12. Articulatory inaccuracy - imprecise consonants, irregular Articulatory breakdowns, distorted vowels; Prosodic excess - Excess & equal stress, prolonged phonemes, prolonged intervals, slow rate; Phonatory -prosodic insufficiency - Harshness, monopitch, monoloudness Ataxic Dysarthria: Most Distinctive Speech Deviations

13. Ataxic Dysarthria: Common Etiologies Those affecting speech are usually bilateral & due to generalized cerebellar disease rather than a focal lesion Vascular lesions - aneurysms, AVMs, hemorrhage in brainstem or midbrain Tumors - acoustic neuromas

14. Although Ataxic dysarthria has been studied with various methods in several languages, questions remain concerning which features of the disorder are most consistent, which speaking tasks are most sensitive to the disorder, and whether the different …

15. Common: dysarthria, amnesia, dysgeusia, tremor, balance impaired, ataxia, aphasia, burning sensation, sedation, paraesthesia, hypoaesthesia, disturbance in attention, speech disorder, areflexia, coordination abnormal, dizziness postural, cognitive disorder, hyperaesthesia, hyporeflexia, ageusia, depressed level of consciousness, dysaesthesia, parosmia, mental impairment

16. Stephanie Balunda is a bilingual (English/Spanish) Speech Language Pathologist specializing in the evaluation and treatment of speech (apraxia of speech/dysarthria), language (aphasia), voice, swallowing and cognitive disorders following stroke, traumatic brain injury, degenerative diseases, and other etiologies

17. Ataxia is manifested by a wide-based unsteady gait, errors of extremity trajectory or placement, errors in motor sequence or rhythm and/or by dysarthria.[1][1] Tone is usually decreased and stretch reflexes may be “pendular.” Nystagmus, skew deviation, disconjugate saccades, and altered ocular

18. Adjustment groups admit children with pronunciation and phonation disorders (voice disorders, disorders of speech rhythm and tempo, dyslalia, rhinolalia, dysarthria, anarthria); systemic speech disorder (alalia, aphasia); secondary speech disorders (due to a mild hearing impairment, psychological problems without mental retardation) or mixed specific development problems.

19. Adjustment groups admit children with pronunciation and phonation disorders (voice disorders, disorders of speech rhythm and tempo, dyslalia, rhinolalia, dysarthria, anarthria); systemic speech disorder (alalia, aphasia); secondary speech disorders (due to a mild hearing impairment, psychological problems without mental retardation) or mixed specific development problems

20. Copolymerize (Amer.) Inhumanitas omni aetate molesta est TCAM retarder bemingle afscheiden riista elitan mirage 束縛 dedication tabernacle (biblical word for a meeting hall or tent) has been forgiven; has been absolved sulphurous full dress ryklys krvarenje step-recovery diode ordnance survey path koulia tratwa dysarthria immeuble cottony

21. Schools (special classes) for speech impaired children admit pupils with normal hearing and no primary damage of intellectual ability who have alalia or aphasia; rhinolalia in a degree which causes secondary underspeech; dysarthria; stuttering which hinders attending an ordinary school; mild hearing decline which causes secondary underspeech or defects of written speech; dysgraphia and dyslexia.

22. Schools (special classes) for speech impaired children admit pupils with normal hearing and no primary damage of intellectual ability who have alalia or aphasia; rhinolalia in a degree which causes secondary underspeech; dysarthria; stuttering which hinders attending an ordinary school; mild hearing decline which causes secondary underspeech or defects of written speech; dysgraphia and dyslexia

23. The energy expenditure needed to Ambulate with an above-knee prosthesis is far greater than that needed with a below-knee prosthesis.: The boy was using arm crutches to Ambulate, and his short legs moved in a wide and awkward manner that suggested he was sweeping the floor with his feet.: Dysarthria, truncal ataxia, and lower extremity weakness developed, with subsequent loss of his …

24. Over the course of time the patient developed a further rise in temperature to 41.8°C, rhabdomyolysis with an increase of the CK to 10190U/L, liver damage with an AST of 3938U/L and an ALT with 3591U/L, coagulation disorder with a prothrombin time <12% and a decrease of the platelets to 22000/μL, hemolysis with a drop of hemoglobin to 6.7g/dL, pancreatitis with an amylase of 108U/L and a lipase of 1530U/L and a severe cerebellar dysfunction with dysarthria, tremor and ataxia.