therapyTimes.com is a daily source for Music, Nursing, Nutrition, Occupational, Pediatric, Physical, Respiratory and Speech Therapy Professionals containing editorials, articles and radiology jobs.

Music Therapy, Nursing, Nutrition Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Pediatric Therapy, Physical Therapy, Respiratory Therapy, Speech Therapy




search site:    
 


home | login | register





:: Researchers Discover First Genes for Stuttering

:: Dental X-rays effectively identify stroke risk factors

:: New, Lifesaving Stroke Device

:: Children’s Hospital Oakland Scientist Characterizes New Syndrome of Allergy, Apraxia, Malabsorption

:: Scientists Create a ‘Golden Ear’ Mouse with Great Hearing As It Ages

:: New Treatment for Adult Stutterers Underway

:: iPods to Provide Help for Stutterers

:: Innovative HearBuilder Software Program

:: Predicting Stroke Risk After TIA

:: ASHA Brings Loan Forgiveness for SLPs Closer to Reality

:: Research Explains Why Some Stroke Patients Recover Language Skills

:: Healthy Language Learning Alternatives to Baby Einstein Videos

:: Thousands of Children Die of Strokes Each Year

:: Online Resource Launches to Promote Communication Skills for Autism

:: Dry Mouth Sufferers Find Oasis

:: Speech-Language Pathologist Delivers Therapy Though Telepractice

:: Subtle Nervous System Abnormalities Predict Risk of Death

:: Variety of Approaches Help Children Overcome Language Problems

:: Tough to Swallow

:: Need Something? Talk To My Right Ear

:: Aerosol Travels Nerve from Nose to Brain to Treat Stroke in Mice

:: Tactile Input Affects What We Hear

:: Oticon Medical Receives FDA Clearance To Market Bone-Anchored Hearing System

:: Bird Brains Suggest How Vocal Learning Evolved

:: Study Sheds Light on VCD and Treatment

:: Nerve protector may lead to new stroke treatments

:: Woman Aquires New Accent After Stroke

:: Some Disabilities Remain Hidden After Stroke

:: Using Rosetta Stone for Speech Therapy

:: Stroke Patients May Soon Have Fun, High-tech Tool

:: Speech and Gesture Mutually Interact to Enhance Comprehension

:: UNT camp provides outlet for children with communication impairments

:: Higher Wealth Linked to Lower Stroke Risk

:: Scientists reaching consensus on how brain processes speech

:: Cancer Patient Finds a New Voice

:: Findings Could Lead to Improved Lip-Reading Training for the Deaf and Hard-Of-Hearing

:: Screening for Infant Hearing Problems

:: New Brain Findings on Dyslexic Children

:: Language Use Decreases in Young Children and Caregivers When Television is On

:: Treadmill Exercise Retrains Brain and Body of Stroke Victims

:: Innovative Computer Unravels the Science of Language

:: Stimuli and desire linked to help stroke patients

:: Doctors Urge Parents to Preset Volume on Holiday Electronics

:: No Easy Answers in Evolution of Human Language

:: Tissue-Engineering Research Focuses on Vocal Cords

:: Magnetic stimulation may improve stroke recovery

:: These Bots Were Made for Walking

:: Therapy Can Help With Speech Volume

:: The Gift of Fluency for the Holiday Season

:: Babies Quickly Overcome Language Barriers

:: Calculating consonants

:: Three Clinical Features Identified to Avoid Misdiagnosis of TIAs

:: Researchers Investigate the Genetic Factors that Underlie Stuttering

:: New Hope for Stroke Patients

:: Radiology residents can accurately assess patients for stroke

:: Major Improvement For The Hearing-Impaired With New Hearing-Aid Software Application

:: Dementia Study Launched Within the Deaf Community

:: Brain Mechanism Identified for Interpreting Speech Libraries

:: Speak Easy

:: Tracing Broken Wiring in Stroke Patients

:: On the Tip of the Tongue

:: Stoke Study Adds “Deferred Consent” Patients

:: A Parkinson’s-Preventing Protein Pathway

:: A Stroke of Genius

:: A Loss for Words

:: Language That Puts You in Touch with Your Bodily Feelings

:: Gene Associated with Language, Speech, & Reading Disorders

:: Computer Technology Improves Stroke Rehabilitation

:: Quality of Life in Children with Cochlear Implants

:: Survey: Speech Therapy Helps, But People Who Stutter Suffer Discrimination

:: Vowel Sounds Affect Our Product Perception

:: Lowry Speech Therapy Opens New Office for Articulation Disorders and Delays

:: Talking louder depends on verbal cues, internal targets

:: Don't Leave Home Without It

:: Research Lays the Foundation for Improving Human Speech

:: Speech Problems Could Be Corrected Before Child Learns to Talk

:: Human Stem Cells Aid Stroke Recovery in Rats

:: Dyslexia Varies Across Language Barriers

:: 100s of babies have benefited from Recently Launched Newborn Hearing Screening Program

:: Minor strokes change the way artists paint

:: New Cell Phone Technology Allows Deaf People to Communicate

:: Researchers Explore Approach to Improve Deaf Education

:: Neural Pathway Missing in Tone-Deaf People

:: Say It Again, Sam

Emergency Medical Record



::  Occupational Therapist-Outpatient | US - TX
::  Occupational Therapist-Rehab | US - OH
::  Occupational Therapist-Rehab | US - TX
::  Occupational Therapist-School | US - AR
::  Occupational Therapist-School | US - TN
::  Occupational Therapist-Skilled | US - TX
::  Licensed Physical Therapists and Physical Therapy Assistants | US - NY
::  Occupational Therapists and Occupational Therapy Assistants | US - NY
::  Home Care Physical Therapists | US - CT
::  OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS (WHEELING, IL) | US - IL
::  Physical Therapy Jobs
By Onward Healthcare
  [more]

   
home :: departments :: journal watch

Research reclaims the power of speech
04.07.09

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/040609Speech


A University of Queensland, Australia, researcher has revealed a new treatment for a speech disorder that commonly affects those who have suffered a stroke or brain injury.

Rachel Wenke, PhD, has shown in a recent study that the Lee Silverman Voice Treatment® may be an effective treatment option for dysarthria patients suffering from stroke and traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Dysarthria is a speech disorder which negatively affects a person’s ability to communicate as they can be difficult to understand and may sound like they have slurred or unclear speech.

The disorder affects 75 percent of individuals with Parkinson’s disease, up to 30 percent of those who have experienced a stroke and about 60 percent of individuals with TBI.

The LSVT® program was originally designed to assist Parkinson’s patients, and Wenke is the first to trial the method’s effectiveness in a group study involving other neurological conditions.

“This research will also help to provide speech pathologists evidence for treatments for the disorder, which may also encourage further research in the area,” she says.

In the study, the effectiveness of LSVT® was compared with traditional dysarthria therapy for 26 participants ranging from 18 to 88 years who had experienced stroke and TBI.

The findings revealed that participants who received the LSVT® demonstrated positive effects of a louder and clearer voice and slower rate of speech. Many participants also reported increased confidence in their ability to communicate which significantly improved their quality of life and wellbeing.

“For instance, after receiving the treatment, one participant reported that the quality of his relationship with his wife had actually improved because his wife could now understand him, whereas before treatment, they would hardly communicate,” Wenke says.

“My findings have also shown that people who lived with dysarthria for up to 21 years were able to make improvements following treatment, therefore the mindset of not treating patients who have not improved in one or two years should be challenged.”

The LSVT® program is an intensive therapy administered one hour a day, four days a week for four weeks. The patients are trained to use loud speech in progressively more difficult speech tasks.

Wenke’s research will be published in Brain Injury and the International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders.

Source: University of Queensland, Australia



  Have a comment on this article? Send it




AccuMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
[webcast archive]

 
Copyright © 2010, Valley Forge Publishing Group
2570 Boulevard of the Generals, Ste 220, Norristown, PA 19403
p. 800-983-7737 | f. 610-854-3780 | e. info@therapytimes.com
 
Web Award   APEX Award   ASBPE Award   ASHPE Award