Laryngeal and Pharyngeal Activity During Semioccluded Vocal Tract Postures in Subjects Diagnosed With Hyperfunctional Dysphonia
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Guzmán Noriega, Marco
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Laryngeal and Pharyngeal Activity During Semioccluded Vocal Tract Postures in Subjects Diagnosed With Hyperfunctional Dysphonia
Abstract
High vertical laryngeal position (VLP), pharyngeal constriction, and laryngeal compression are common
features associated with hyperfunctional voice disorders. The present study aimed to observe the effect on these variables
of different semioccluded vocal tract postures in 20 subjects diagnosed with hyperfunctional dysphonia. During
observation with flexible endoscope, each participant was asked to produce eight different semioccluded exercises: lip
trills, hand-over-mouth technique, phonation into four different tubes, and tube phonation into water using two different
depth levels. Participants were required to produce each exercise at three loudness levels: habitual, soft, and loud. To
determine the VLP, anterior-to-posterior (A-P) compression, and pharyngeal width, a human evaluation test with three
blinded laryngologists was conducted. Judges rated the three endoscopic variables using a five-point Likert scale. An
intraclass correlation coefficient to assess intrarater and interrater agreement was performed. A multivariate linear regression
model considering VLP, pharyngeal width, and A-P laryngeal compression as outcomes and phonatory tasks
and intensity levels as predictive variables were carried out. Correlation analysis between variables was also conducted.
Results indicate that all variables differ significantly. Therefore, VLP, A-P constriction, and pharyngeal width changed
differently throughout the eight semioccluded postures. All semioccluded techniques produced a lower VLP, narrower
aryepiglottic opening, and a wider pharynx than resting position. More prominent changes were obtained with a tube
into the water and narrow tube into the air. VLP significantly correlated with pharyngeal width and A-P laryngeal compression.
Moreover, pharyngeal width significantly correlated with A-P laryngeal compression.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/123604
DOI: DOI: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2013.05.007
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Journal of Voice, Vol. 27, No. 6, pp. 709-716
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