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  • Child-hood-Onset Fluency Disorder (Stuttering)

Risk and Prognostic Factors of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Risk factors of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder include genetic and physiological factors
  • Although stuttering can be life-long, approximately 65-85% of children recover from the dysfluency, with severity of fluency disorder at age 8 years predicting recovery or persistence into adolescence and beyond

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  • Development and Course of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Functional Consequences of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • [DSM-5-TR] Diagnostic Criteria of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Associated Features of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Risk and Prognostic Factors of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Differential Diagnoses to Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Comorbid Diagnoses to Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder

  • Interdisciplinary Connections & Research Related to Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder (Stuttering)

Learn After
  • Genetic and Physiological Factors of Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder