Literature DB >> 15865464

Immediate and sustained changes in tongue movement with an experimental palatal "fistula": a case study.

Viviane C C Marino1, William N Williams, Paul W Wharton, Martha F Paulk, Jeniffer C R Dutka-Souza, Geralyn M Schulz.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the immediate and longer-term effect(s) on tongue movement following the placement of an experimental opening through a palatal obturator (replicate of subject's prosthesis) worn by an adult male with an unrepaired cleft of the hard and soft palate.
METHODS: Tongue movements associated with an anterior experimental opening of 20 mm(2) were examined under three conditions: a control condition in which the subject wore the experimental obturator completely occluded, a condition immediately after drilling the experimental openings through the obturator, and a condition after 5 days in which the subject wore the experimental obturator with the experimental opening. An Electromagnetic Articulograph was used for obtaining tongue movements during speech.
RESULTS: The findings partly revealed that the immediate introduction of a perturbation to the speech system (experimental fistula) had a temporary effect on tongue movement. After sustained perturbation (for 5 days), the system normalized (going back toward control condition's behavior). Perceptual data were consistent with kinematic tongue movement direction in most of the cases.
CONCLUSIONS: Although the immediate response can be interpreted as indicative of the subject's attempts to move the tongue toward the opening to compensate for air loss, the findings following a sustained perturbation indicate that with time, other physiological adjustments (such as respiratory adjustments, for example) may help reestablish the requirements of a pressure-regulating system.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15865464     DOI: 10.1597/03-048.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cleft Palate Craniofac J        ISSN: 1055-6656


  1 in total

1.  Nasalance and nasality at experimental velopharyngeal openings in palatal prosthesis: a case study.

Authors:  Aveliny Mantovan Lima-Gregio; Viviane Cristina de Castro Marino; Maria Inês Pegoraro-Krook; Plinio Almeida Barbosa; Homero Carneiro Aferri; Jeniffer de Cassia Rillo Dutka
Journal:  J Appl Oral Sci       Date:  2011 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 2.698

  1 in total

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