Voice characteristics, effects of voice therapy, and long-term follow-up of contact granuloma patients |
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Authors: | Riitta Ylitalo Britta Hammarberg |
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Affiliation: | Department of Logopedics and Phoniatrics, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge University Hospital, Huddinge, Sweden |
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Abstract: | This study evaluates the laryngoscopic findings and voice characteristics of male contact granuloma patients before and after voice therapy and at a follow-up about 9 years later. Pre- and posttherapy recordings as well as follow-up recordings were made for 19 granuloma patients. Pretherapy revealed the most salient perceptual voice characteristics were low pitch, monotony, and a high degree of vocal fry and hyperfunction. Interjudge reliability for these traits was high. Immediately following therapy the healed patients (n = 10) had a decrease in hyperfunction, vocal fry, and monotony, while the unhealed patients (n = 9) had an increase in hyperfunction and vocal fry decreased only marginally. Monotony decreased significantly in this group. As regards the acoustic analyses, no significant differences were found in mean fundamental frequency (F0) or perturbation. At the follow-up assessment 4 patients had granuloma while 15 had normal laryngeal status. Perceptually their voice characteristics resembled those pretherapy independently of the laryngeal findings. The results suggest that reduced hyperfunction and decreased vocal fry may create better circumstances for the healing process at the posterior glottis. |
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Keywords: | Voice quality Perceptual analysis Visual analog scale Acoustic analysis Voice therapy Contact granuloma |
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