Impacts of Skeletal Anterior Open Bite Malocclusion on Speech

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Abstract

Introduction: Articulation problems are seen in 80% to 90% of dentofacial deformity (DFD) subjects compared with 5% of the general population, impacting communication and quality of life, but the causal link is unclear. We hypothesize there are both qualitative (perceptual) and quantitative (spectral) differences in properties of stop (/t/ or /k/), fricative (/s/ or /ʃ/), and affricate (/tʃ/) consonant sounds and that severity of anterior open bite (AOB) jaw disharmonies correlates with degree of speech abnormality. Methods: To test our hypotheses, surgical orthodontic records and audio recordings were collected from DFD patients (n = 39 AOB, 62 controls). A speech pathologist evaluated subjects, and recordings were analyzed using spectral moment analysis (SMA) to measure sound frequency distortions. Results: Perceptually, there is a higher prevalence of auditory and visual speech distortions in AOB DFD patients when compared to controls. Quantitatively, a significant (P

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Keyser, M. M. B., Lathrop, H., Jhingree, S., Giduz, N., Bocklage, C., Couldwell, S., … Jacox, L. A. (2022). Impacts of Skeletal Anterior Open Bite Malocclusion on Speech. Face, 3(2), 339–349. https://doi.org/10.1177/27325016221082229

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