[Error analysis of functional articulation disorders in children]

Hua Xi Kou Qiang Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2008 Aug;26(4):391-5.
[Article in Chinese]

Abstract

Objective: To explore the clinical characteristic of functional articulation disorders in children and provide more evidence for differential diagnosis and speech therapy.

Methods: 172 children with functional articulation disorders were grouped by age. Children aged 4-5 years were assigned to one group, and those aged 6-10 years were to another group. Their phonological samples were collected and analyzed.

Results: In the two groups, substitution and omission (deletion) were the mainly articulation errors in these children, dental consonants were the main wrong sounds, and bilabial and labio-dental were rarely wrong. In age 4-5 group, sequence according to the error frequency from the highest to lowest was dental, velar, lingual, apical, bilabial, and labio-dental. In age 6-10 group, the sequence was dental, lingual, apical, velar, bilabial, labio-dental. Lateral misarticulation and palatalized misarticulation occurred more often in age 6-10 group than age 4-5 group and were only found in lingual and dental consonants in two groups.

Conclusion: Misarticulation of functional articulation disorders mainly occurs in dental and rarely in bilabial and labio-dental. Substitution and omission are the most often occurred errors. Lateral misarticulation and palatalized misarticulation occur mainly in lingual and dental consonants.

MeSH terms

  • Articulation Disorders*
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Lip
  • Male
  • Tongue*