Speech Disorders

Exercises for Stuttering

Stuttering is a communication disorder that affects around 1 percent of the population around the world. Many factors contribute to a stuttering problem, including genetics, another speech disorder, neurophysiology and family dynamics. Stuttering can usually be successfully treated through speech therapy and certain home and lifestyle changes, such as joining a self-help group, creating a relaxed home environment, avoiding criticism and having an understanding attitude toward the stutterer, according to the National Institute on Deafness and...

All About Speech Disorders

About Voice Fluency Disorders

When fluency errors regularly go above this amount, medical professionals will suspect a language or voice disorder.

Spasmodic Neurological Speech Disorders

In cases where SD runs in families, a genetic factor has been identified, according to National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. The disorder typically begins in individuals age 30 to 50 and it appears m...

About Catatonic Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia is a psychiatric disorder characterized by dysfunctional thought, speech, movement and perception of reality. A person with schizophrenia may have hallucinations, delusions, disorganized speech, odd body movement...

How to Get Help for Stuttering

who specializes in dyfluency disorders (the clinical term for stuttering). Someone who stutters may exhibit part- as well as, or in addition to, whole-word repetitions ("I-I-I"), blocks (the word pronounced suddenly stops), pro...

How to Deal With a Stutter

Stuttering is a speech impediment that stretches some words out, makes other words shorter and can cause a person to repeat a word over and over. Children often stutter when they are first learning to talk, but grow out of it a...

About Stuttering Treatments

The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDOC) estimates that as many as three million Americans, of all ages, stutter. Stuttering can be treated by a speech therapist or a speech pathologist, a pr...

3 Ways to Manage Speech Disorders

In many cases, people with speech disorders are very aware of their condition and simply need a little courtesy from others to enunciate what they mean. Don't condescend or talk down to a person with a speech disorder. Maintai...

3 Ways to Identify Speech Disorders

Some speech disorders center on the repetition of certain sounds or an inability to pronounce some sounds. Apraxia is different because it affects the coordination of muscles necessary to generate speech. You may know exactly ...

4 Ways to Prevent Speech Disorders

Some speech disorders develop because the parents don't realize that there is a problem. A child may be deaf, for example, or have abnormalities in the mouth or nasal cavity which may not become apparent right away. Test for s...

4 Ways to Treat Speech Disorders

He will analyze your speech patterns, watch the way your mouth and lips move, and pinpoint specific issues such as articulation and comparative motor skills. He can also identify strengths in your speech patterns and areas in w...

3 Ways to Manage Apraxia

If you are charged with the care of a person suffering from some form of apraxia, it's important to seek the appropriate therapy to treat and manage the disorder. Speech and language therapy is used for those who have apraxia o...

5 Things You Need to Know About Stuttering

There are different schools of thought concerning how a stuttering problem develops. Some forms of stuttering are thought to be tic or brain disorders in which there is a misfiring of information to the brain, making it difficu...

5 Things You Need to Know About Stuttering

The National Institute of Health estimates that some 3 million Americans have some form of verbal stuttering problem. Experts have some different schools of thought concerning how a stuttering problem develops. Some forms of st...