I have to let you know that your videos are saving my life in grad school right now. Thank you so much, you're doing ab absolutely wonderful job with these videos!
Super apreciative of all of your videos about dysarthria. Engaging and informative, thanks for putting all the effort in and psoting for all of us to learn from!
Thank you so much for your videos! I am a uni student studying speech and language pathology in Hong Kong. Your videos are very clear to help me differentiate between different types of Dysarthria. Looking forward to more videos!
Good question, mine has been around 2/3 years too, managing it? Just continue Speech Pathology and talk pretty much everyday to buildup muscle strength in your jaw, there really is no good and certain way I can say helps to manage it, I’m not a trained professional either lol so I don’t have much experience
@@blushingkrystals3524 for my case, i try acupunture etc,,but the most impact is workout i can say,,but idk for sure are that bcause our body adaptive to the condition or what,,but it just better not recovered( i still cant sing,and its deppressing)
I have episodic ataxia and when its triggered I have trouble forming words. I also describe it as not being able to get my tongue in the right place. It feels weird. It takes a lot more effort to speak and often comes out slurred. Thank you for explaining whats happening. It makes sense now
"Our cerebellum is basically our conductor and a BMX rider...." Best quote ever! Thank you so much for these videos!! They are really helpful during SLP grad school. Do you have plans of making a mixed dysarthria video?
It's really an insane analogy but I'll stand by it 😄 I'm undecided about doing a mixed video - once you can recognise major features of subtypes you can often pick up mixed dysarthria.
very glad I found this excellent video, thank you so much! I was wondering if you could make another one about speech and voice therapy in ataxic dysarthria maybe? all the best for you!
@@johnepierce ok thanks. It is used as a distinctive feature of ataxic dysarthria. Specifically "irregular articulatory breakdowns", and i cant fine a specific definition anywhere
@@ΙορδάνηςΤζαμπαζάκης I found this definition straight from the seminal paper by Darley, Aronson and Brown (1968): "Intermittent nonsystematic breakdown in accuracy of articulation."
Hi Kelvianna, Cerebral palsy more often results in spastic dysarthria or mixed dysarthria. However, you are right that a very small percentage of pure ataxic dysarthria is caused by cerebral palsy. Something like 2-3% I think.
I have to let you know that your videos are saving my life in grad school right now. Thank you so much, you're doing ab absolutely wonderful job with these videos!
I'm a current SLP grad student and your videos have been so helpful! TY :)
same here 🙂
Super apreciative of all of your videos about dysarthria. Engaging and informative, thanks for putting all the effort in and psoting for all of us to learn from!
Thank you so much for your videos! I am a uni student studying speech and language pathology in Hong Kong. Your videos are very clear to help me differentiate between different types of Dysarthria. Looking forward to more videos!
oh cool!! Same here, I'm studying speech pathology in New York!
BLESS YOU FOR THESE VIDEOS JOHN!
I have Ataxic Dysarthria and the confidence boost this gave me
how did you managed this condition?,i have this condition for about 2/3 years,,and find this is about my cerebelum and DNA a year ago
Good question, mine has been around 2/3 years too, managing it? Just continue Speech Pathology and talk pretty much everyday to buildup muscle strength in your jaw, there really is no good and certain way I can say helps to manage it, I’m not a trained professional either lol so I don’t have much experience
@@blushingkrystals3524 for my case, i try acupunture etc,,but the most impact is workout i can say,,but idk for sure are that bcause our body adaptive to the condition or what,,but it just better not recovered( i still cant sing,and its deppressing)
I have episodic ataxia and when its triggered I have trouble forming words. I also describe it as not being able to get my tongue in the right place. It feels weird. It takes a lot more effort to speak and often comes out slurred. Thank you for explaining whats happening. It makes sense now
thank you so much for this video. helped me a lot in learning this topic.
"Our cerebellum is basically our conductor and a BMX rider...." Best quote ever!
Thank you so much for these videos!! They are really helpful during SLP grad school. Do you have plans of making a mixed dysarthria video?
It's really an insane analogy but I'll stand by it 😄
I'm undecided about doing a mixed video - once you can recognise major features of subtypes you can often pick up mixed dysarthria.
@@johnepierce Do it
very glad I found this excellent video, thank you so much! I was wondering if you could make another one about speech and voice therapy in ataxic dysarthria maybe? all the best for you!
Very informative
thank you for sharing
Please make a flaccid dysarthria one!
It's next on my list!
Amazing
Excellent 👍
These videos are wonderful! Thank you! Do you happen to have one on flaccid dysarthria as well?
It's in the works but I'm having trouble finding good recordings!
Too good 👍
can you give the definition of articulatory breakdown? What is its difference from consonant distortions??
Hmm not sure where I used that term. I think articulatory breakdown does refer to distortions - at least, they mean the same thing to me!
@@johnepierce ok thanks. It is used as a distinctive feature of ataxic dysarthria. Specifically "irregular articulatory breakdowns", and i cant fine a specific definition anywhere
@@ΙορδάνηςΤζαμπαζάκης I found this definition straight from the seminal paper by Darley, Aronson and Brown (1968): "Intermittent nonsystematic breakdown in accuracy of articulation."
@@johnepierce thank you a lot!
I got a lesion in midline vermis and slurred speech ;is it a coincidence or a lesion causes slurring ?
Yes Nat, a lesion in the vermis could cause slurring of this type (ataxic)
Thank you
how is this treated in children?
You didn't include cerebral palsy
Hi Kelvianna, Cerebral palsy more often results in spastic dysarthria or mixed dysarthria. However, you are right that a very small percentage of pure ataxic dysarthria is caused by cerebral palsy. Something like 2-3% I think.
@@johnepierce I have spastic diplegia cerebral palsy qnd ataxic dysarthria
@@kelviannaepperson3677 Well there you go! :-)
I also have it bc of cerebral palsy