Mikies Gift

 




 

 

 

Pilot Study


The study will be in 5 stages over a 3 month period.


Objective: To determine if corrective massage protocols are useful as an effective approach to influence and improve speech abilities.

We request you begin a diary recording your thoughts and observations as soon as you decide to commit to this study.

The initial tudy will include 10 children who have been identified as presenting speech difficulties.


Stage 1:
Children are initially evaluated by certified speech pathologist Nancy Cary. Nancy has over 23 years of experience with people from 0 to 110, in many different settings, schools, in home care, hospitals, etc. Her license number is SP 7263.
Scheduling will be coordinated with Nancy. Appointments will be approximately 45 minutes long.

Stage 2:
3 sessions of corrective massage approximately one week apart. Scheduling will be coordinated with Taum. Appointments are approximately 30-45 minutes. One or both parents are required to be in attendance.
Muscles to receive therapy include muscles involved in movement of head, neck, mouth, lips, and tongue. It is suggested children wear loose comfortable clothing.


Stage 3:
A second session with Nancy Cary to record, monitor, and evaluate progress. Scheduling will be coordinated with Nancy.


Stage 4:
3 more sessions of corrective massage with Taum Sayers. Appointments are approximately 30-45 minutes. One or both parents are required to be in attendance.
Muscles to receive therapy include muscles involved in movement of head, neck, mouth, lips, and tongue. It is suggested children wear loose comfortable clothing.


Stage 5:
The final session with Nancy Cary to record, monitor, and evaluate progress. Scheduling will be coordinated with Nancy. You may already be seeing the fruits of all of our labor after the initial sessions.

Forms and miscellaneous documents will be provided.

 

To find out more please email us at: mikies_gift@musclemanagement.com
Or call 1-877-684-8814

 

Study for Children’s Speech Improvement.

Mikies story …..
Several years ago I had the opportunity to have four year old Mikie as a client. He originally came in for therapy for his hips. His parents noticed his ability to stand and walk was not keeping up with the children in his age group. His grandmother (a nurse) had heard of my work so she and Mikies mom brought him to see me for corrective massage therapy hoping we could help his walking problems. He exhibited tenderness in the hip region and therapy was primarily focused there. Included was an overall muscular rebalancing which included gentle detailed corrective massage in his neck and jaw areas. After several visits Mikies parents told me that his teacher in preschool was observing two important improvements:
Mikies increased ability to complete his sentences when speaking.
The clarity of his spoken words.
These noticeable improvements continued coinciding with Mikies visits for therapy.
I recently had an interesting conversation sharing this with Nancy Cary, a Licensed Speech Language Pathologist whose specialty is children. We discussed the role muscular compromises play in interfering with the ability to speak clearly and what I thought was enabling Mikies speaking abilities to improve. Nancy and I decided these ‘coincidences’ presented some wonderful possibilities. We have organized a study to see if this is a protocol worthy of sharing with the hope of helping other children with their speech issues.
Consider the following…
Within a study at Purdue using spectral analysis, researchers found a relationship between disrupted muscular activity and speech problems. **
Simply put, muscles act upon messages sent via the nervous system.
Some are set on automatic, for example the musculature interactions involved in digestion.
Others require intention, for example the musculature actions required to walk. A person intends to move across the room and the muscles respond.
It appears that when there are problems/compromises in speech, one component can be soft tissue situations that impede the intended message passing (via the nerves) through, in, and around the problematic muscles.
Contemplate dental work, more than likely after the appointment your mouth felt ‘funny’ and speaking was an awkward challenge. Was this because the nerves monitoring pain were suppressed and this also compromised the ability of the musculature involved in speech? Often the effects wear off….what if those effects did not diminish?
The muscles involved in speech and articulation are innervated by nerves passing through the musculature of the neck and jaw regions. Our theory is compromise/tension within these muscles would then diminish nerve flow and impair speech. Therefore, if muscular compromise/tension is reduced, what follow would be an improved ability to speak.
Our question:
“Was it just a coincidence that Mikies ability to speak improved following corrective massage to his neck and jaw? We think not…and so Nancy Cary and Taum Sayers are organizing a study to see if in fact there are noticeable benefits to approaching speech difficulties from a manual therapy point of view.
Will reducing muscular tension in the neck/jaw/mouth regions have a positive affect on a child’s ability to speak? We shall find out!!!

 

To find out more please email us at:

 

mikies_gift@musclemanagement.com


Or call 1-877-684-8814

 

** http://jslhr.asha.org/cgi/content/abstract/32/2/252

http://jslhr.asha.org/cgi/content/abstract/33/4/690