Common voice disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Whar is functional voice disorder?

A

Associated with vocal misuse and phonotrauma
Vocal misuse - voice production behaviours that prevent the vocal mechanism from working smoothly and efficiently
Eg.
MTD
Ventricular dysphonia
Psychogenic voice disorders

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2
Q

How does vocal misuse develop?

A

Periods of increased personal tension
Greater than usual demands on voice
Laryngitis
Periods of voice difficulty that resolve spontaneously
Increase in episode of voice difficulty
Altering vocal behaviour and being unaware of the change

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3
Q

What are the features of vocal misuse?

A

Increased tension and strain

  • Hard glottal attack
  • High laryngeal position
  • Anteroposterior laryngeal squeezing

Inappropriate pitch level

  • Puberphonia
  • Persistant glottal fry
  • Lack of pitch variability

Excessive talking

  • Vocal fatigue
  • Complaints correlate with patterns of excessive talking

Ventricular phonation

  • Ventricular VF move towards midline and cover true VF
  • Low pitch, hoarse, diplophonia
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4
Q

What is phonotrauma/vocal abuse and what are the signs/symptoms?

A
Harsher than vocal misuse
Excessive prolonged loudness
Strained and excessive voice use when there is already swelling, inflammation and tissue change present.
Excessive coughing/throat clearing
Screaming/noise-making
Over-enthusiasm in sports/exercise
Signs/symptoms:
Harsh/strident
Hoarse
Breathy
Hard glottal attack
High volume
Vocal fatigue
Frequent throat clearing
Pitch breaks
Tissue changes/laryngeal pain
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5
Q

What is the aetiology/pathophysiology of vocal nodules?

A

Functional voice disorder

Aetiology:
Tissue reaction to frictional trauma between VF
Excessive laryngeal tension

Pathophysiology:
Small, white/greyish protuberance on free margin of VF
Located at junction of anterior 1/3 and posterior 2/3
Usually bilateral and symmetrical

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6
Q

What are the stages of vocal nodules?

A

Early stages - localised capillary haemorrhage swelling and redness.
Later stage - fibrosis of epithelium, rough, semicircular, nodule.

Increase mass and stiffness of VF due to hard nodule.

If caught early while still soft they can resolve but when harder they may have to get surgery.

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7
Q

What are the speaker characteristics of people with vocal nodules?

A

Incessant talker, socially aggressive, tense, loud, teachers, singers, lawyers, autioneers, actors.

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8
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of vocal nodules?

A

Hoarseness, breathiness
Habitual cough and throat clearing
Airflow may be increased
Increased subglottal pressure - while VF can still be closed because of the extra air required for vibration.
With large nodules there will be a decrease in subglottic air pressure as more air in allowed to escape.

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9
Q

What is the management of vocal nodules?

A

If nodules are immature and non-fibrous - voice therapy.

If nodules are fibrous - surgical removal and voice therapy.

Voice therapy:
Program of decreased vocal use/vocal rest.
Program of vocal hygiene.
Elimination of abusive behaviours

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10
Q

What is the aetiology and pathophysiology of vocal polyps?

A

Functional voice disorder

2 types: sessile/broad based or pedunculated
Usually unilateral
Located on junction of anterior 1/3 and posterior 2/3

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11
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of vocal polyps?

A

Diplophonia, sudden voice breaks, hoarseness, roughness, breathiness.
Increased airflow and increased subglottal pressure (to overcome glottal incompetence)

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12
Q

What is the management of vocal polyps?

A

Medical: Pedunculated and large sessile are surgically removed.
Small sessile - voice therapy.

Voice therapy:
Similar to vocal nodules.
2 - 6 months before improvements in quality

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13
Q

What is Reinke’s oedema and what is the aetiology and pathophysiology?

A

Functional voice disorder

Polypoid degeneration
Build-up fluid in first layer of lamina propria in Reinke’s space.

Aetiology:
VF trauma and misuse
Smoking
More frequent in females if long term smokers.

Pathophysiology:
VF full of fluid, boggy
Oedema full length of VF bilaterally.
Oedema disturbs elasticity of VF - increased stiffness.

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14
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of Reinke’s oedema?

A

Low pitch, hoarseness and shortness of breath.

Increased airflow.

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15
Q

What is chronic laryngitis and what is the aetiology and pathophysiology?

A

Functional voice disorder
Long-standing inflammation of laryngeal mucosa secondary to phonotrauma.

Aetiology:
Smoking - most common
Vocal abuse/misuse - coughing, throat-clearing
Overuse of mouthwashes and gargles

Pathophysiology:
VF red, irregular, thick, rounded.
Small dilated blood vessels on surface.
Oedema in supraglottic area.

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16
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of chronic laryngitis?

A

Hoarseness, high or low pitch, non-productive cough, sore throat.
Increased air flow and subglottal pressure.

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17
Q

What is the management of chronic laryngitis?

A

Medical management: Surgical stripping if voice therapy unsuccessful.

Voice therapy: Program to reduce vocal abuse and misuse.

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18
Q

What is muscle tension dysphonia and what is the aetiology and pathophysiology?

A

Functional voice disorder
Very common type of voice disorder
Vocal muscle misuse

Aetiology:
Excessive musculoskeletal tension in head and neck.
Intrinsic and extrinsic muscles sensitive to emotional stress.
Hypercontraction of muscles - common denominator in functional dysphonias.

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19
Q

What is the symptomatology of MTD?

A
Aphonia/dysphonia
Breathiness
Hoarseness
Excessive high pitch (could be low too)
Pain in laryngeal area
Referred pain to ears and chest
Sensation of lump or tightness in larynx or pharynx
Pain in response to pressure on larynx.
Often worried that they may have polyps or cancer which can increase tension.
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20
Q

What is the physiological basis of MTD?

A

Usually normal larynx.
May demonstrate abnormal function.
Secondary mucosal changes may occur.

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21
Q

What is ventricular dysphonia and what is the aetiology and pathophysiology?

A

Functional voice disorder
Voicing as result of vibration of ventricular VF.
Simultaneous vibration of true and false VF - diplophonia.

Aetiology:
Excessive muscle tension.
May be substitute voice for sever debilitating disease.

Pathophysiology:
False VF approximate and begin to vibrate.
Increased vocal fold mass - unable to vibrate quickly therefore low pitch.

22
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of ventricular dysphonia?

A

Low pitch, diplophonia, very hoarse.
Decreased pitch range
Decreased air flow.

23
Q

What is the management of ventricular dysphonia?

A

Medical - Contraindicated unless due to primary VF defect.

Voice therapy: If capable of true Vf phonation then retrain.
If compensation then improve characteristics of ventricular phonation eg. pitch and loudness.

24
Q

What are psychogenic voice disorders?

A

Conversion voice disorders and puberphonia.

25
Q

What are conversion voice disorders?

A

Psychogenic voice disorders.
Total or partial loss of phonation due to conversion reaction.
Physical symptoms not linked to anatomical or physiological disease.
Person convinced the problem is organic.

26
Q

What is conversion muteness?

A

Psychogenic voice disorder.
Most extreme and incapacitating of conversion disorders.
Neither whispers nor articulates.
Involuntary and voluntary cough present - normal VF function.
Speaker - chronic stress, primary and secondary gain, indifference, suppressed anger, neurotic.

27
Q

What is conversion aphonia?

A
Psychogenic voice disorder.
Involuntary whispering.
Able to cough, laugh, cry - normal VF
Larynx high in neck and rigid.
80% female.
Onset sudden or over period of hours.
Hoarseness goes to whisper
Often triggered by colds - dysphonia remains afterwards.
Acute/chronic emotional stress.
28
Q

What is conversion dysphonia?

A
Psychogenic voice disorder.
Varying degrees and types of hoarseness.
With or without strained-harsh quality.
High-pitched falsetto breaks.
Breathiness.
Intermittent whispering.
Moments of normal voice.
29
Q

What is the voice therapy for conversion disorders?

A

Principal goal is to re-establish normal VF function by reshaping vegetative vocal functions.
Aim to achieve good voice in first session.
Adopt positive attitude with person.
Focus on voice production NOT cause.

These can be easy or very hard to treat depending on underlying issues.

30
Q

What is puberphonia?

A

Psychogenic voice disorder.
Failure to eliminate high pitched voice associated with puberty and substitute with lower pitch of adulthood.
Structurally normal larynx.
Mainly males (one octave change usually).

31
Q

What is the aetiology and pathophysiology of psychogenic voice disorders?

A

Psychosocial factors.
Strong feelings feminine attachment (??)
Rejects responsibilities and roles of adulthood.

Organic:
Endocrine disorders
Severe hearing loss
Disease affecting respiration eg. MND

Pathophysiology:
Larynx high in neck and tilted down.
VF lax.
Phonation: arytenoids adduct tightly, posterior portion VF prevented from vibrating.
Thyroarytenoid muscle fails to contract - decreased VF mass and only thin edge of VF vibrates.

32
Q

What is the management of psychogenic voice disorders?

A

Principal goal - shape vegetative vocal production to normal voice.
Prognosis is excellent.

33
Q

What are organic voice disorders?

A

Disorders due to trauma eg. intubation granuloma, vocal process granuloma, injuries.

Disorders associated with organic mass lesions eg. cancer.

Disorders related to endocrine disorders/changes.

34
Q

What is a vocal process granuloma (contact ulcer) and what is the aetiology and pathophysiology?

A

Organic voice disorder.
Small ulceration on the medial surface of vocal processes of arytenoid cartilages.
Continued irritation in presence of bacteria leads to ulcer and granulation tissue.

Aetiology:
Repeated, forceful hyperadduction of vocal processes.
Hard glottal attack, low pitch and glottal fry.
Intubation trauma.
Stress-related gastrointestinal difficulties.

Pathophysiology:
“Cup and saucer” appearance.
Early stages there may be a strand of mucous seen between 2 processes (contact ulcer diathesis).

35
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological sings of vocal process granuloma?

A

Constant throat clearing, vocal fatigue.
Breathy, hoarse.
Discomfort - unilateral in are of thyroid cartilage.
Increase subglottal pressure, increased air flow, increased intensity.

36
Q

What is the management of a vocal process granuloma?

A

Medical: Surgery - only if intensive voice therapy has failed to reduce or eliminate CU.

Voice therapy:
Eliminate vocal abuse behaviours.
Alter voice production methods.

37
Q

What are neurological voice disorders?

A

Voice disorders with a neurological cause.

Eg. paralysis, degenerative diseases affecting speech etc.

38
Q

What is the superior laryngeal nerve what does its paralysis cause?

A

Innervates that cricothyroid muscle.
Tenses vocal folds to increase pitch.
Contributes vocal fold adduction.

Paralysis of this muscle causes a neurological voice disorder.
Vocal fatigue, loss of vocal range and hoarseness.

39
Q

Discuss recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis.

A

Neurological voice disorder.
Left RLN lesions are 10 times more frequent than right RLN lesions.
RLN innervates all intrinsic muscles of the larynx except cricothyroid which is SLN.
Lesion may be unilateral or bilateral.
2 types: adductor or abductor.

40
Q

What are the four types of recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis?

A

Unilateral adductor paralysis - VF will not move to midline on one side.

Bilateral adductor paralysis - Neither VF is able to move to midline, phonation impossible.

Unilateral abductor paralysis - One VF remains in fixed adducted position. One VF will not abduct.

Bilateral abductor paralysis - Both VF remain in adducted position. Both VF won’t abduct. Respiratory difficulty.

41
Q

What are the four positions of a VF?

A

Lateral
Intermediate
Paramedian
Median

42
Q

What is the aetiology of recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis?

A
Unilateral RLN paralysis:
Intrathoracic neoplasms, aneurysms.
Mitral valve stenosis (left auricle enlarges and stretches RLN)
Neck trauma
Idiopathic
Bilateral RLN paralysis:
Thyroidectomy
Neck trauma
Tumours
Infection
43
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of RLN paralysis?

A

Unilateral RLN paralysis:
Mild breathiness, hoarseness, reduced loudness, shortness of breath.

Bilateral RLN paralysis:
Inhalatory stridor, voice quite good because both VF weakly adducted.

Both - Increased airflow and decreased subglottal pressure.

44
Q

What is the management for recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis?

A

Surgical management:
Vocal fold medialization:

Injection of material into VF itself (plump up VF, fat, collagen, teflon, hydroxyapatite injected into/lateral to thyroarytenoid muscle, lamina propria).

Implantation of material into larynx - pushes VF medially (insert material medial to thyroid cartilage at level of VF, serves as a wedge to move paralysed VF to midline, type 1 thyroplasty)

Arytenoid adduction (rotation of arytenoid cartilage so that tip of vocal process moves to midline).

Voice usually excellent immediately post-op.
Deteriorates a little as oedema resolves.
Improvement in one week - permanent level 2 weeks.

Bilateral RLN paralysis: Tracheostomy, arytenoidectomy or fixing.

Voice therapy: Facilitative techniques to reduce glottal incompetence

45
Q

What is spasmodic dysphonia?

A
Neurological voice disorder.
Spastic dysphonia/laryngeal dystonia.
Strained, choked, effortful voice patter.
Similar to stuttering of the voice.
Relatively rare disorder.
Resistant to traditional voice therapy.

Aetiology:
Psychologically based - conversion reaction, musculoskeletal tension.
Neurologically based - organic/essential tremor, dystonia
Idiopathic - unknown origin
Onset - 4th to 5th decade.
Often associated with URTI, emotional stress, may be insidious.

46
Q

What are the three types of spasmodic dysphonia?

A
  1. Adductor spasmodic dysphonia
    Phonation - true and false VF hyperadduct in intermittent and irregular spasms.
    Attribute to organic pathology - psychological factors co-exist.
    Abrupt, staccato, vocal explosions, strained-strangled, intermittent voice breaks, harsh
    Larynx normal at rest.
  2. Abductor spasmodic dysphonia
    Severe breathy aphonia - intermittent breaks
    VF episodically abduct to lateral position
    Not as common as adductor
    ?Abductor related to conversion reaction
    Difficulty transition from voiceless consonant to vowel
  3. Mixed abductor-adductor spasmodic dysphonia
    Both adductor and abductor laryngispasms
    Aphonic, breathy periods and voice arrests
47
Q

What is the management of spasmodic dysphonia?

A

Medical:
Botox injections
- Thyroarytenoid/vocalis: AD-SD
- Posterior cricoarytenoid: AB-SD

Results in muscle paralysis through chemical denervation.
Results in 70-90% return to normal function.
Air flow rates normalised.
Reduction in muscle hyperfunction.
Requires re-injection 3-5 months.

Voice therapy:
Breathy voicing
Elevation of pitch (reduces spasms)
Easy voice onsets and articulatory contacts.
Relaxation therapy.
Coordination exhalation and voice onset.
48
Q

What is hypokinetic dysphonia and what is its aetiology?

A

Neurological voice disorder.
Dysphonia caused by Parkinson’s disease.
Reduced movement of cords.

49
Q

What is the pathophysiology of hypokinetic dysphonia?

A

VF normal in structure.
Phonation - closure incomplete due to bowing of VF in middle.
Unable to tense VF meaning that pitch is affected.

50
Q

What are the perceptual and physiological signs of hypokinetic dysphonia?

A
Monopitch and monoloudness. 
Reduced loudness.
Reduced stress.
Harsh vocal quality.
Breathiness.
Increased airflow, decreased subglottal pressure.
51
Q

What is the management for hypokinetic dysphonia?

A

Medical: drug therapy - PD medication (levodopa)

Voice therapy:
Increase VF adduction.
Increase loudness and intonation.
Lee Silverman Voice Treatment - LSVT