Affiliations 

  • 1 a Faculty of Health Sciences, Speech Sciences Programme , Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia , Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia
  • 2 b Department of Special Education and Communication Disorders, Biological Systems Engineering, Center for Brain, Biology and Behavior , Communication Neuroscience Laboratories, University of Nebraska , Lincoln , NE , USA
  • 3 c College of Education , Institute for Measurement, Methodology, Analysis and Policy (IMMAP), Texas Tech University , Lubbock , TX , USA , and
  • 4 d Communication Neuroscience Laboratories , University of Nebraska , Lincoln , NE , USA
Int J Speech Lang Pathol, 2017 12;19(6):616-627.
PMID: 28425760 DOI: 10.1080/17549507.2016.1265587

Abstract

PURPOSE: This research characterised perioral muscle reciprocity and amplitude ratio in lower lip during bilabial syllable production [pa] at three rates to understand the neuromotor dynamics and scaling of motor speech patterns in individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD).

METHOD: Electromyographic (EMG) signals of the orbicularis oris superior [OOS], orbicularis oris inferior [OOI] and depressor labii inferioris [DLI] were recorded during syllable production and expressed as polar-phase notations.

RESULT: PD participants exhibited the general features of reciprocity between OOS, OOI and DLI muscles as reflected in the EMG during syllable production. The control group showed significantly higher integrated EMG amplitude ratio in the DLI:OOS muscle pairs than PD participants. No speech rate effects were found in EMG muscle reciprocity and amplitude magnitude across all muscle pairs.

CONCLUSION: Similar patterns of muscle reciprocity in PD and controls suggest that corticomotoneuronal output to the facial nucleus and respective perioral muscles is relatively well-preserved in our cohort of mild idiopathic PD participants. Reduction of EMG amplitude ratio among PD participants is consistent with the putative reduction in the thalamocortical activation characteristic of this disease which limits motor cortex drive from generating appropriate commands which contributes to bradykinesia and hypokinesia of the orofacial mechanism.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.