dysarthria

NOUN
  1. impaired articulatory ability resulting from defects in the peripheral motor nerves or in the speech musculature
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How To Use dysarthria In A Sentence

  • Doses should be withheld for nystagmus, sedation, ataxia, or dysarthria.
  • A 50 year old man presented with a two week history of a flu-like illness and four days of dysarthria, dysphagia, shortness of breath, and neck discomfort.
  • Brain stem strokes almost always have other neurological findings-diplopia,cranial nerve palsies ,dysarthria, etc-but midline cerebellar disease may only have vertigo, nausea and inability to walk so intense is the disequilibrium. Archive 2007-11-01
  • She was intelligent, articulate, despite severe dysarthria, was positive, willing to give anything a go, and had a wicked, infectious sense of humour.
  • Toxic side effects of phenytoin include nystagmus, dysarthria, diplopia, ataxia, and exacerbation of seizures.
  • The diagnosis usually is not suspected until the neurological symptoms, including cognitive impairment, pain and paresthesias, dysarthria, and gait abnormalities, appear.
  • Gradually, the patient developed dystonic posturing of limbs and trunks, had difficulty in walking, dysarthria, drooling of saliva with tremor of limbs.
  • A 50 year old man presented with a two week history of a flu-like illness and four days of dysarthria, dysphagia, shortness of breath, and neck discomfort.
  • From the hospital correspondence, you gather the psychiatrist detected dysarthria and abnormal involuntary movements and asked for a neurologist's opinion.
  • It said that Ali seems to have a mild ataxic dysarthria difficulty in coordinating the muscles used in speaking. Sound and Fury
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