Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Impaired speech production is a major obstacle to full participation in life roles by stroke survivors with aphasia and apraxia of speech. The proposed study will demonstrate the short-term effects of auditory masking on speech disfluencies and identify individual factors that predict a positive response, enabling future work to develop auditory masking as a treatment adjuvant targeting long-term improvement in speech. Providing an additional treatment option for adults with aphasia and apraxia of speech will have the clear benefit of improving quality of life and allowing individuals to participate more actively in their health care decisions through improved communication.


Clinical Trial Description

The objective of this research is to test the short-term effects of listening to noise (i.e. auditory feedback masking) on speech fluency in stroke survivors with aphasia and apraxia of speech. People with nonfluent types of aphasia frequently have apraxia of speech, which affects the motor programming of speech movements, causing distortions, slow rate, and speech disfluencies that impede the forward flow of communication. Speaking while listening to noise (e.g. auditory masking) is known to reduce disfluencies and increase speech rate in people who stutter. This method has been tested in people with aphasia, resulting in positive effects on speech production for a subset of those tested. The investigators contend that individuals who have apraxia of speech in addition to aphasia are most likely to benefit from auditory masking, but most previous studies did not test participants for apraxia of speech. In addition, though masking is most likely to affect speech disfluencies, previous studies did not measures disfluencies. The proposed work has two specific aims. Aim 1 will determine the short-term effect of auditory masking, provided on a single day, on speech fluency in stroke survivors with aphasia and apraxia of speech. Aim 2 will identify individual factors that predict a positive response, including presence of apraxia of speech, lesion characteristics, and type of aphasia (e.g. Broca's, Wernicke's). Voxel-based lesion analysis techniques will be used to determine sites of lesion associated with positive and negative response to auditory masking. Completion of this study will remove barriers to studying auditory masking as a technique for clinical intervention, but also as a research tool for behavioral neuroscientists probing the speech motor control system in speakers with aphasia and apraxia of speech. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02094014
Study type Observational
Source University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Contact Adam Jacks, Ph.D.
Phone 9199669464
Email adam_jacks@med.unc.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 2014
Completion date December 2015

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05477238 - Oxygen Consumption in Post-stroke Patients During Various Walking Activities Compared to Healthy Controls N/A
Completed NCT00046293 - ReoPro and Retavase to Treat Acute Stroke Phase 2
Completed NCT04584645 - A Digital Flu Intervention for People With Cardiovascular Conditions N/A
Completed NCT01116544 - Treatment of Chronic Stroke With AMES + EMG Biofeedback N/A
Withdrawn NCT04991038 - Clinical Investigation to Compare Safety and Efficacy of DAISE and Stent Retrievers for Thrombectomy In Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02563886 - Electrically Assisted Movement Therapy N/A
Recruiting NCT02446730 - Efficacy and Safety of BiomatrixTM Stent and 5mg-Maintenance Dose of Prasugrel in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome Phase 4
Completed NCT02141932 - Pocket-size Cardiovascular Ultrasound in Stroke N/A
Completed NCT01915368 - Determining Optimal Post-Stroke Exercise (DOSE) N/A
Recruiting NCT01769326 - Influence of Timing on Motor Learning N/A
Recruiting NCT02557737 - Botulinim Toxin Type A Injections by Different Guidance in Stroke Patients With Spasticity on Upper Extremities Phase 3
Terminated NCT01705353 - The Role of HMGB-1 in Chronic Stroke N/A
Completed NCT01656876 - The Effects of Mirror Therapy on Upper Extremity in Stroke Patients N/A
Completed NCT01423201 - Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) Triage and Evaluation of Stroke Risk
Completed NCT01182818 - Fabry and Stroke Epidemiological Protocol (FASEP): Risk Factors In Ischemic Stroke Patients With Fabry Disease N/A
Completed NCT00542256 - tDCS and Physical Therapy in Stroke N/A
Withdrawn NCT00573092 - Analyzing Gene Regions That May Interact With the Effectiveness of High Blood Pressure Drugs N/A
Completed NCT00377689 - Evaluation of an Intervention Program Targeted at Improving Balance and Functional Skills After Stroke Phase 2
Recruiting NCT00166751 - Sonographic Assessment of Laryngeal Elevation N/A
Completed NCT00125619 - Internally Versus Externally Guided Body Weight-Supported Treadmill Training (BWSTT) for Locomotor Recovery Post-stroke N/A