voice Flashcards

1
Q

Three functions of the larynx

A
  • primary biological function: protection of the airway.
  • pressuring valving
  • phonation
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2
Q

three important landmarks on the hyoid bone

A
  • corpus or body
  • lesser cornu
  • greater cornu or horns
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3
Q

The larynx is comprised of nine cartilages

A
Thyroid cartilage
cricoid cartilage
arytenoid cartilages (2)
cuneiform cartilages
corniculate cartilages (2)
epiglottis.
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4
Q

Motor signals from the cerebral cortex descend via _________________ to the brainstem.

A

upper motor neurons

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5
Q

Descending motor signlas from the cerebral cortex are modified by the basal ganglia, which controls ________ and ________ of muscle

A

rate

intensity

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6
Q

Where do the upper motor neurons synapse on the LMN?

A

brainstem

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7
Q

CN X provides motor or sensory info?

A

both

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8
Q

Where is CN X located?

A

nucleus ambiguus in the medulla

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9
Q

2 branches of CN X that serve the larynx

A
  • superior laryngeal nerve (SLN)

- recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN).

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10
Q

The SLN consists of 2 branches:

A

internal branch

external branch.

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11
Q

The iSLNprovides__________ information from the _________________ of the larynx

A

sensory info

supraglottica area

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12
Q

The eSLN provides __________ info for the _____________

and ____________ infor for the __________

A

motor—CT
sensory—- infraglottic area
surface of the inferior pharyngeal constrictors.

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13
Q

The RLN provides _________ innervation to all intrinsic laryngeal muscles EXCEPT the ___________ muscles.

A

motor

cricothyroid

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14
Q

Severing of the RLN= ?

A

VF paresis or paralysis.

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15
Q

Severing SLN=?

A
  • problems with pitch raising

- some degree of incomplete VF closure.

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16
Q

The VF is made up of 3 layers.

A

mucosoa or cover
vocal ligament or transition
thyroarytenoid muscle or body

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17
Q

mucosoa or cover

A

epithelium

superficial lamina propria

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18
Q

vocal ligament or transition

A

intermediate lamina propria

deep lamina propria

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19
Q

thyroarytenoid muscle or body

A

vocalis and muscularis

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20
Q

When does the lamina prorpria develop into a 3 layer structure?

A

11-15 years old

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21
Q

2 aerodynamic forces that are determinants of VF vibration

A
  1. Positive Subglottal pressure that builds below VF

2. Negative pressure due to Bernoulli effect

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22
Q

Steps of vibration

A
  1. Subglottal air pressure (Ps) builds beneath VFs
  2. Ps overcomes closed VFs and folds are blown open
  3. VFs open at the bottom first, then opening proceeds t top
  4. As top opens, bottom begins to close, creating a vertical phase difference (Mucosal wave )
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23
Q

What will stiffness do to the mucosal wave?

A

make it decreased or absent

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24
Q

Healthy VFs will exhibit a healthy mucosal wave that travels _____ to _____ of the way from the lateral portion of the VFs.

A

1/3 to 2/3

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25
Q

Myoelastic Aerodynamic Theory of Phonation

A
  1. Laryngeal muscle activity can effect VF elasticity (elasti recoil)
  2. After the VFs have been blown open, the VFs recoil to the midline due to their mass and elasticity.
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26
Q

Types of glottal pressure

A
  1. Subglottal pressure=below vf
  2. Transglottic pressure=pressure between vf
  3. Supraglottic pressure=above folds
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27
Q

Bernoulli Effect- when a gas/liquid flows from a larger passage into a constricted or narrower passage, the velocity of the gas/liquid molecules must _________while the outward pressure of the molecules on the walls of the narrow passage _________.

A

increase

decreases

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28
Q

Phonation threshold pressure (PTP)

A

minimum amount of pressure to just get the VFs oscillating (vibrating).

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29
Q

What affects Phonation threshold pressure (PTP)?

A

stiffness and viscosity.

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30
Q

Tension and stiffness will cause PTP to be ____________.

A

greater

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31
Q

Air flow

A

quantity of a gas or fluid which passes a point in unit time.

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32
Q

Pressure

A

ratio of force to the area over which that force is distributed

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33
Q

Periodic

A

sound wave repeats itself exactly for each cycle of vibration.

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34
Q

Non-periodic

A

sound wave is not the same cycle to cycle.

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35
Q

Complex tone

A

s a tone with more than one frequency and consists of the fundamental frequency and its harmonics.

36
Q

Sine wave or pure tone……

A

consists of only one frequency.

37
Q

Fundamental frequency

A

lowest frequency in the tone.

38
Q

VF vibration is actually ‘_____________ This means that there is some, although very slight, variation or ‘irregularity’ in the vibratory characteristics of VF vibration.

A

quasi-periodic.’

39
Q

Octave

A

doubling of frequency,

i.e. 200 Hz – 400 Hz is one octave, 200 Hz – 800 Hz is 2 octaves, etc.

40
Q

Frequency of VF vibration is dependent upon

A

VF length and tension

41
Q

three vocal registers

A

modal or chest
Falsetto
glottal fry

42
Q

Falsetto register

A

produces our highest frequencies.

43
Q

glottal fry register

A

‘air stingy’ and does not project well.

44
Q

modal or chest register

A

The register we speak in

45
Q

Maximum Flow Declination Rate (MFDR)

A

aerodynamic measurement that can be taken during a voice evaluation which tell us how quickly the VFs are closing by showing us how rapidly the transglottal airflow goes to zero.

46
Q

Quality

A
  • -Determined by the periodicity of VF vibration and degree of glottal closure.
  • -descriptors such as breathy, rough, and hoarse etc.
47
Q

Resonance

A
  • Result of vocal tract filtering on the spectrum of the glottal source
  • timbre of the voice which can be bright, dark, throaty, nasal, and twangy etc.
48
Q

5 parameteres used to describe Voice production

A
quality
pitch
oudness
resonance
register
49
Q

Laryngeal and VT Anatomy in Children:

Infant Vocal Tract length.

A

-Shorter VT: lengthens by 4-6 months

50
Q

Laryngeal and VT Anatomy in Children:

INfant Velum & epiglottis

A

in close proximity til 4-6 mos

51
Q

Laryngeal and VT Anatomy in Children:

vocal ligament

A

undifferentiated LP, thick cover, w/ more vascularity

52
Q

Laryngeal and VT Anatomy in Children:

-Arytenoids

A

disproportionately large until 4-6 months

53
Q

Laryngeal and VT Anatomy in Children:

-Laryngeal position

A

high @ C2- C4; descends to C5 by 2 yrs; C6-C7 by age 15

54
Q

Pediatric Voice

A

• Differences in pediatric laryngeal anatomy and physiology from adult laryngeal anatomy and physiology result in differences in pediatric acoustic, aerodynamic and perceptual parameters!

55
Q

Intensity can be controlled in several ways.

A
  • adequate respiratory drive and adequate subglottal pressure.
  • adequate VFs adduction.
  • shaping the vocal tract
56
Q

How does adequate respiratory drive and adequate subglottal pressure control intensity?

A

must take in enough air AND have adequate laryngeal valving so pressure can build beneath the VFs.

57
Q

How does adequate VFs adduction control intenstity?

.

A

-VFs remain closed longer and close more rapidly to produce a loud voice.

58
Q

How does shaping the vocal tract control intensity.

A

enhances the mid and upper frequency harmonics.

59
Q

Types of Laryngeal Exams

A
  • Mirror
  • Transnasal Flexible endoscopy
  • Oral endoscopy (rigid scope)
  • Videostroboscopy (flexible or rigid scope)
  • High speech videoendoscopy (flexible or rigid -scope)
  • Videokymography
60
Q

Mirror

A

Utilizes a mirror and light source
Useful only for a GROSS assessment of laryngeal structures
Cannot be used to evaluate vibratory characteristics for accurate diagnosis

61
Q

Transnasal Flexible Endoscopy

A
  • Flexible fiber optic cable arries light source to the scope tip and carries image to camera and computer monitor
  • Pros
  • –Pt can speak normal and sing
  • –Excellent view of supraglottic structures and velar function
  • –Less likely to elicit a gag
  • Cons
  • –Image color and distortion, poor magnification and less bright
62
Q

Oral Rigid Scope

A

Pros

  • —Good light and color, excellent magnification
  • Cons
  • —Can only produce sustained vowels
  • —-Increased gag reflex likelihood
63
Q

Videostroboscopy

Primary Purposes:

A
  • Identifies physiological correlates of perceived resonance and voice quality documents status of speech anatomy and physiology
  • Assists education and clinical discussion
  • Confirms diagnosis
64
Q

Videostroboscopy Secondary purposes

A
  • Confirms diagnosis
  • Improves motivation and counseling
  • Provides biofeedback
65
Q

Dynamic strain is the result of __________intensity phonation and may cause a/an ________ in frequency

A

High ; increase

66
Q

In the One Mass Model (Vocal Tract Inertance) of vocal fold vibration, sustained phonation is driven by

A

alternating positive and negative transglottal (intra) and supraglottal pressures

67
Q

The Bernoulli Principle states that

A

an increase in air particle velocity results in a decrease in pressure

68
Q

Regarding nonlinear tissue movement, when the vocal folds are opening the airflow is _________and the net tissue velocity is _________________:

A

convergent ; outward

69
Q

List three supraglottic indicators of intrinsic laryngeal muscle tension

A

medial lateral squeezing
anterior posterior squeezing
supraglottic squeezing
false vocal fold medialization

70
Q

Electroglottography

A

is an indirect measurement of VF contact area

71
Q

Jitter is a

A

cycle to cycle variation in the frequency, i.e. period, of vocal fold vibration

72
Q

Shimmer is

A

a cycle to cycle variation in the amplitude of vocal fold vibration

73
Q

A patient who presents with a higher than normal s/z ratio (greater than 1.40), may have___________, while a patient who presents with a lower than normal s/z ratio (less than .80) may have ___________________.:

A

incomplete glottic closure; vocal fold hyperadduction

74
Q

Bilateral lesions to CN X above the origin of the pharyngeal, SLN and RLN branches results in:

A

abductor paralysis

75
Q

Ways toincrease water intake

A
use a humidifier
use a facial steamer 
take longer showers
avoid excessive caffeine
increase water intake
Humidifier
Steaming
76
Q

Info for case histoy

A

Onset of problems, duration, vocal hygiene, changes

77
Q

Vocal intensity is controlled at the level of the larynx by

A

increasing vocal fold adduction and speed of closure

increasing the amount of the time the vocal folds are closed

78
Q

Puberphonia is characterized by

A

high pitch phonation,
falsetto voice
breathy vocal quality

79
Q

T/F

Restoring a patient’s voice to its pre-morbid status is the primary goal of voice therapy

A

False

80
Q

T/F

Most geriatric voice problems are not due to aging (presbylaryngis) but due to disease

A

True

81
Q

T/F

For the transgender male (female to male transition) client, addressing habitual pitch may not be necessary because the use of male hormones typically has the side effect of lowering the voice and decreasing habitual pitch

A

True

82
Q

What order fortherapy tasks?

A

relaxation
breathing
voice exercises

83
Q

The Confidential Voice therapy technique

A

is often used post-surgically
is especially helpful in cases of VF swelling
eliminates hard glottal attacks

84
Q

When treating a transgender female (male to female transition) client the clinician should target a habitual pitch in the___________________

A

gender neutral pitch range

85
Q

. The most common voice disorder for geriatric women i

A

vocal fold nodules and polyps

86
Q

Children show levels of subglottal pressure that are??

A

50% - 100% greater than for adults