Key Takeaways
Stroke can disrupt the motor systems responsible for planning, coordinating, and executing speech. When these pathways are damaged, individuals may experience motor speech disorders (MSDs)—primarily dysarthria or apraxia of speech (AOS). These disorders affect speech clarity, intelligibility, prosody, and the natural flow of communication.
Dysarthria is caused by weakness, paralysis, incoordination, or altered tone of the muscles used for speech, including:
Depending on the neurological site of lesion, dysarthria may present as:
AOS is a motor planning and programming disorder. Strength is typically intact, but the brain struggles to sequence speech movements. Characteristics may include:
AOS frequently co-occurs with Broca’s aphasia, complicating diagnosis and treatment.
These treatments rebuild motor plans through high-repetition practice of:
Approaches include:
Why it works: Intensive repetition strengthens motor planning and execution pathways through experience-dependent neuroplasticity.
How Constant Therapy supports this: Adaptive drill-based modules progress automatically from single sounds to multisyllabic words and phrases, allowing individuals to achieve high trial counts between clinical sessions.
Many individuals with MSDs benefit from strategies that regulate timing and rhythm of speech, such as:
These strategies improve coordination, intelligibility, and naturalness.
How Constant Therapy supports this: Timed tasks and rhythm-based cues help individuals practice consistent pacing and breath-speech coordination.
Some forms of dysarthria (particularly flaccid and hypokinetic) result in low volume, reduced breath support, and poor projection. Evidence-based approaches focus on:
How Constant Therapy supports this: Voice tasks can prompt gradually increasing loudness or sustained vocal output, supporting respiratory-phonatory integration.
Biofeedback helps individuals understand how closely their production matches a target. This includes:
Research shows biofeedback improves motor learning because it enhances awareness and error correction.
How Constant Therapy supports this: Visual progress indicators and performance metrics allow users to monitor accuracy and adjust productions in real time.
The principle of “massed practice” is foundational in motor learning. Frequent, high-dose, repetitive tasks support:
Intensive approaches—including daily or near-daily practice—show greater long-term gains.
How Constant Therapy supports this: SLPs can prescribe daily practice that supplements in-person therapy, ensuring patients achieve the repetition needed for motor-speech improvements.
Differentiating dysarthria from AOS—and identifying mixed presentations—directly shapes treatment selection.
Optimal therapy includes:
Speech-motor improvements often depend on:
Integrating cognitive-linguistic tasks strengthens real-world carryover.
Family and caregivers help reinforce pacing strategies, intelligibility supports, and practice opportunities.
Daily practice is essential for motor-speech recovery—digital platforms enable consistent application.
Constant Therapy enhances the clinical work SLPs do by providing:
For stroke survivors, the combination of structured therapy and daily digital practice offers the consistency needed for motor-speech recovery.
Motor speech disorders can have a profound impact on communication, confidence, and quality of life after stroke. With accurate diagnosis, evidence-based interventions, and consistent practice, individuals can regain clarity, intelligibility, and control of their speech. SLPs guide this process, and digital tools like Constant Therapy help extend therapy beyond the clinic so progress continues every day—not just during scheduled sessions.
References
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