2. What is Apraxia?
• A speech and language (communication) disorder
• A motor speech disorder, which basically means the brain has trouble
sending messages to the lips, mouth and tongue
• Two types:
• Acquired Apraxia which is more common in adults
• Developmental Apraxia, also known as Childhood Apraxia of Speech
(CAS)
• birth to death
• Can be mild to severe
3. Characteristics
• Complications with large and small motor skills
• verbal difficulty putting sounds and syllables together correctly to form words
• difficulty running, skipping
• finger dexterity (holding and controlling a pencil affects handwriting)
• Understand language better than they can speak it especially multi-syllable words
• Other challenges can include problems with reading, writing, spelling, math, chewing
and swallowing difficulties
• Suffer from certain stigmas and stereotypes
• less mature than their peers
• socially awkward so making friends is tough
4. Prevalence
• More common in boys than in girls
• Possible causes for adult Apraxia
• include stroke
• neurological injuries or condition
• traumatic brain injury
• Doctors don’t always know what causes Childhood Apraxia
• genetic
• a simple infection
• You might be surprised to learn that the fierce mixed martial artist Rhonda
Rousey has Apraxia
5. Treatments/Support
• Speech and language pathologists diagnose Apraxia
• Treatments
• speech therapy
• ultrasound biofeedback (recording child tongue movement during sound production then working to
change placement for correct sound)
• tactile facilitation
• repetition, repetition, repetition
• occupational therapy for motor planning (both fine and gross)
• sign language
6. Simulation Activity
• Place two crackers in your mouth
• Chew 5 times and do NOT swallow or move the food toward your cheeks
• Say this sentence:
• Shelby sells seashells by the seashore