Dysarthria is a motor speech disorder that makes it harder to control the muscles used for speaking. It doesn't affect your intelligence or what you want to say — just the physical ability to say it clearly.

Dysarthria in plain terms

When you speak, your brain sends signals to dozens of muscles in your lips, tongue, jaw, throat, and chest. These muscles have to work together with precise timing to produce clear speech.

Dysarthria happens when something disrupts those signals or weakens those muscles. The result: speech that may sound slurred, quiet, slow, or difficult to understand — even though you know exactly what you want to say.

Important: Dysarthria is not the same as aphasia. Aphasia affects language — finding words, forming sentences, understanding others. Dysarthria affects the physical production of speech. Some people have both, but they're different conditions.

What causes dysarthria?

Dysarthria can result from any condition that affects the nervous system or the muscles involved in speech:

How dysarthria affects speech

Dysarthria shows up differently depending on the cause, but common patterns include:

Reduced loudness

Your voice may be quieter than you intend. You might think you're speaking at a normal volume, but others ask you to repeat yourself or speak up.

Slurred or imprecise consonants

Words may run together. Sounds like "t," "k," "p," and "s" — which require precise tongue and lip movements — become unclear.

Changed speech rate

Speech may be too fast (making it hard to follow) or too slow (making conversations tiring). Some people experience both — rushing through phrases, then pausing unexpectedly.

Monotone or flat voice

The natural rise and fall of speech (prosody) may be reduced, making speech sound flat — even when you're feeling animated.

Breathy or strained voice quality

The voice may sound weak, hoarse, or like you're pushing too hard to get words out.

Getting a diagnosis

If you notice changes in your speech, see your doctor. They may refer you to:

An SLP will typically listen to your speech, ask you to perform specific tasks (like sustaining a vowel or repeating phrases), and may use recordings or tools to measure loudness, clarity, and rate.

Can dysarthria be improved?

Dysarthria can't always be reversed, but speech can often be improved with targeted practice. Treatment depends on the cause and severity, but typically includes:

Speech therapy

Working with an SLP on exercises to strengthen muscles, improve breath support, slow rate, and over-articulate sounds. Programs like LSVT LOUD (for Parkinson's) focus specifically on increasing loudness.

Home practice

Therapy works best when combined with daily practice at home. Even 5–10 minutes a day can reinforce what you learn in sessions.

Feedback tools

Real-time feedback helps you know if you're hitting your targets. A practice platform like Speech Check can give you feedback on loudness and clarity so you can adjust in the moment rather than guessing.

Communication strategies

Beyond exercises, there are practical strategies that help: facing your listener, reducing background noise, using shorter sentences, and checking in ("Did you catch that?").

Living with dysarthria

Dysarthria can be frustrating. Being asked to repeat yourself, or seeing confusion on someone's face, takes a toll. But it's important to remember:

Tips for family and friends

If someone you know has dysarthria:

A note on Speech Check: Speech Check is a speech-practice and self-monitoring platform — not a diagnostic tool, and not a replacement for a speech-language pathologist or clinical care. Our current pilot is Parkinson's-focused; the practice principles in this article still apply.

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People living with Parkinson's across Canada are shaping what comes next. Six months, free, guided practice with real-time feedback.

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