Velopharyngeal Insufficiency
Velopharyngeal insufficiency is a disorder of structure that causes a failure of the velum (soft palate) to close against the posterior pharyngeal wall (back wall of the throat) during speech in order to close off the nose (nasal cavity) during oral speech production.

Anatomy
The soft palate is commonly referred to as the Velum. Acts as a sphincteric valve to separate the oral and nasal cavities during speech and swallowing.
Velopharynx (VP):
- Anteriorly: the velum
- Laterally: lateral pharyngeal walls
- Posteriorly: posterior pharyngeal wall
In speech production, the velopharynx is considered an articulator, as are the jaw, tongue, lips, pharynx, and larynx.
In English, ALL phonemes are produced with oral airflow that requires VP closure to exclude nasopharyngeal airflow.
Exception of /m/, /n/, and /ng/ which require an open nasopharyngeal valve and nasal airflow to produce these sounds.

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