1.The consensus among experts on the diagnosis and treatment of pediatric vocal cord paralysis.
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;37(10):765-770
Pediatric vocal ford paralysis is a vocal cord movement disorder caused by damage to the pediatric laryngeal motor nerves.It is mainly characterized by voice, breathing,and swallowing difficulties,and in severe cases,it can lead to choking in affected children. Currently, the diagnosis and treatment of this condition pose a significant challenge for pediatric otolaryngologists, as the goal is to minimize damage to the vocal folds and laryngeal framework.In order to standardize the diagnosis and treatment of pediatric vocal cord paralysis, the Pediatric Otolaryngology Committee of the Chinese Medical Association,in collaboration with multiple children's medical centers nationwide, have formulated this consensus document.
Humans
;
Child
;
Vocal Cord Paralysis/therapy*
;
Consensus
;
Vocal Cords/surgery*
;
Larynx
;
Voice
;
Laryngeal Diseases/complications*
2.Advances in application research on assessment methods of vocal fatigue.
Miao LI ; Jinlian ZENG ; Bixia LIANG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;37(11):934-938
Vocal fatigue(VF) is the common clinical symptom of voice diseases. It can also be a separate symptom and is considered to be a signal for the body to rest and to avoid pathological damage to the vocal cords. Therefore, the early identification and evaluation of vocal fatigue is of great value to the early prevention and treatment of vocal diseases. In recent years, there are many researches on the evaluation methods of vocalization fatigue. We searched the relevant literature and summarized the application status of vocal fatigue assessment methods, in order to provide reference for the selection and development of vocal fatigue assessment tools in clinical practice.
Humans
;
Voice Quality
;
Voice Disorders/diagnosis*
;
Vocal Cords
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Dysphonia/diagnosis*
3.Clinical analysis of 102 cases of pediatric vocal fold nodules.
Yihua NI ; Wenxia CHEN ; Zhengmin XU
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;37(12):943-947
Objective:To evaluate the impact of vocal fold nodules on the quality of life of children, and to compare the efficacy between conservative management(voice hygiene education, etc.) and laryngeal microsurgery. Methods:A retrospective study was performed on 102 children with vocal fold nodules, who received treatment in Children's Hospital of Fudan University during the period from January 2020 to December 2022. According to the regime, the patients were divided into conservative management group and surgical treatment group; Cases are divided into pre-school age group (2-5 years old) and school-age group (6-12 years old) based on age. The pediatric voice-related quality of life (pVRQOL) was used to evaluate the impact of vocal fold nodules on the quality of life of children and differences in efficacy between two treatment regimens. Results:The pVRQOL scores of vocal fold nodule grades 1, 2, and 3 were 91.58±8.17, 78.87±12.49, 72.50±12.08, respectively. There were statistical differences between grade 1 and grade 2, and between grade 2 and grade 3. There were statistical differences between grade 1 grade 2, grade 2 and grade 3 (P<0.001), suggesting that the higher the rating of vocal cord nodules, the lower the pVRQOL score of patients was. The pVRQOL score of the school-age group was 69.83±11.11, which is lower than that of the preschool group(87.59±8.63), and the difference was statistically significant (P=0.042). Vocal fold nodules had a significant impact on the pVRQOL score of school-age children. In the conservative management group, the pVRQOL scores before and after treatment were 83.99±12.66 and 87.26±9.58, respectively, and there was significant difference between the two groups(P=0.046). Indirect voice therapy such as voice hygiene education could improve children's pVRQOL scores and was more effective for school-age children(P<0.001). The microsurgical treatment had a more significant improvement in the pVRQOL score of children. Conclusion:The higher the rating of vocal fold nodules, the greater the impact on the quality of life of patients. Vocal fold nodules had a greater impact on the quality of life of school-age children than that of preschool children. Voice hygiene education could improve the quality of life of children, which was more evident in the school-age group. Compared with voice hygiene therapy, laryngeal microsurgery had a more significant effect on improving the pVRQOL score of patients. It is recommended to undergo laryngeal microsurgery for the treatment of vocal fold nodules for the requirement of improving the quality of life related to voice. During the 6-month follow-up period after surgery in this study, the short-term efficacy of laryngeal microsurgery in treating vocal cord nodules in children is clear, but the long-term efficacy needs further research.
Child
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Humans
;
Child, Preschool
;
Vocal Cords/pathology*
;
Quality of Life
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Voice Quality
;
Laryngeal Diseases/surgery*
;
Polyps/pathology*
4.Validation of the Filipino Voice Handicap Index-10 (FVHI-10)
Melfred L. Hernandez ; Diane Clarice M. Atienza ; Daryl Anne D. Madrid ; Michael C. Valdez
Philippine Journal of Surgical Specialties 2023;78(2):31-39
Rationale/Objective:
The Voice Handicap Index (VHI) is a selfassessment tool that evaluates the patient’s reaction and perception to a vocal disorder. This study aimed to establish, validate and assess the reliability of the Filipino translation of the Voice Handicap Index 10 (FVHI-10).
Methods:
The VHI-10 was translated and adapted to the Filipino language and culture with the help of the Sentro ng Wikang Filipino- University of the Philippines Manila. A self-assessment of voice quality and FVHI-10 were performed by the patients and their GRBAS scale scoring was rated by a speech language pathologist. The Spearman’s correlation between the FVHI-10 and the self-assessment and GRBAS scale scores was obtained to test for validity. To evaluate the reliability of the FVHI-10, testing through determining internal consistency was conducted through the use of Chronbach α coefficient, inter-item correlation, item-total correlation and Cronbach α coefficient if tool item was deleted.
Results:
Fifty five individuals participated in the study (29 males, 26 females, age range: 30-55 years) with the diagnosis of voice disorder based on complaints of hoarseness or dysphonia and laryngoscopic findings. Convergent validity was confirmed with moderate to strong correlation between the FVHI-10 and self-assessment (r=-.893, p<.05) and GRBAS scale scores (r=.427, p<.05). Reliability as measured
through internal consistency was confirmed (Cronbach α=.874) (average ρ<.5) (corrected item-total correlation>0.3) (average interitem correlation=.15-.85).
Conclusion
The FVHI-10 was determined to be a valid and reliable instrument that can be utilized in the assessment of Filipino patients with voice disorders.
Dysphonia
;
Voice Disorders
;
Quality of Life
5.Reliability and validity of the Chinese version of URICA-Voice scale.
Caipeng LIU ; Yajing WANG ; Yanhua SHANG ; Yishi PANG ; Hua LI ; Jinshan YANG ; Wenjun CHEN ; Yiqing ZHENG ; Faya LIANG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;37(5):323-328
Objective:To translate the University of Rhode Island Change Assessment of voice scale(URICA-Voice) into Chinese and test its reliability and validity. Methods:The URICA-Voice scale was converted into Chinese by literal translation, cultural adjustment, expert consultation, pre-investigation, and back translation. Convenience sampling was used to recruit patients at four speech therapy centers from February to May 2022. Then the Chinese version of the scale was distributed to them, and the reliability and validity of the scale were tested after data collection. Cronbach ɑ was used to evaluate the reliability. The critical ratio method and Pearson correlation coefficient were used for item analysis. Item-level content validity, scale-level content validity, and confirmatory factor analysis were used to test the validity of the scale. Results:A total of 247 valid questionnaires were collected. ①Item analysis: the critical ratios between a high-score and low-score groups of 32 items were all statistically significant(P<0.01) and all the critical ratios were above 3.00. The Pearson correlation between 32 items and the total score was significant(P<0.01). ②Validity analysis: I-CVI=1.00, S-CVI/Ave=1.00, χ²/df=2.30, RMSEA=0.07. Except for item 9 and 23, the standardized factor loading coefficients of other items were all above 0.50. AVE of the four dimensions of the scale was all above 0.50, and the combined reliability of the four dimensions was all above 0.70. The correlation coefficients between dimensions were less than the square root of the AVE of the dimension itself. ③Reliability analysis: the Cronbach ɑ of the whole scale was 0.94, and the Cronbach ɑ of the four dimensions were 0.88, 0.92, 0.94, and 0.88 respectively. Conclusion:The Chinese version of URICA-Voice has good reliability and validity, and can be used as a specific measurement tool for evaluating the compliance of voice training in China.
Humans
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China
;
Language
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Reproducibility of Results
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Voice
6.Preliminary analysis of the effect of individualized voice therapy on pediatric voice disorders.
Xi WANG ; Chao CHENG ; Dabo LIU ; Yanhong CHEN ; Xin GUAN
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;37(5):350-353
Objective:To determine the effectiveness of individualized voice therapy in persistent pediatric voice disorders. Methods:Thirty-eight children who were admitted to the Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology Shenzhen Hospital, Southern Medical University due to persistent voice disorder from November 2021 to October 2022 were included. All children were evaluated by dynamic laryngoscopy before voice therapy. Two voice doctors performed GRBAS score and acoustic analysis on the children's voice samples to obtain the relevant parameters including F0, Jitter, Shimmer, and MPT; All children were given personalized voice therapy for 8 weeks. Results:Among 38 children with voice disorders, 75.8%(29 cases) were diagnosed with vocal nodules, 20.6%(8 cases) were vocal polyps, and 3.4%(1 case) were vocal cysts. And in all children. And 51.7%(20 cases) had the sign of supraglottic extrusion under dynamic laryngoscopy. GRBAS scores decreased from 1.93 ± 0.62, 1.82 ± 0.55, 0.98 ± 0.54, 0.65 ± 0.48, 1.05 ± 0.52 to 0.62 ± 0.60, 0.58 ± 0.53, 0.32 ± 0.40, 0.22 ± 0.36, 0.37 ± 0.36. F0, Jitter, Shimmer decreased from(243.11±39.73) Hz, (0.85±0.99)%, (9.96±3.78)% to(225.43±43.20) Hz, (0.33±0.57)%, (7.72±4.32)%, respectively MPT was prolonged from(5.82±2.30) s to(7.87±3.21) s after treatment. All parameters changes had statistical significance. Conclusion:Voice therapy can solve children's voice problems, improve their voice quality and effectively treat children's voice disorders.
Humans
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Child
;
Voice Disorders/diagnosis*
;
Voice
;
Voice Quality
;
Acoustics
;
Speech Acoustics
;
Vocal Cords/surgery*
7.The effect of Wendler Glottoplasty to elevate vocal pitch in transgender women.
Chi ZHANG ; Qian HOU ; Ting Ting GUO ; Jing Ting ZHONG ; Hui REN ; Ge Lin LI
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;58(2):139-144
Objective: To evaluate the effect of Wendler Glottoplasty to elevate vocal pitch in transgender women. Methods: The voice parameters of pre-and 3-month post-surgery of 29 transgender women who underwent Wendler Glottoplasty in department of otorhinolaryngology head and neck surgery of Beijing Friendship Hospital from January, 2017 to October, 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. The 29 transgender women ranged in age from 19-47 (27.0±6.3) years old. Subjective evaluation was performed using Transsexual Voice Questionnaire for Male to Female (TVQMtF). Objective parameters included fundamental frequency (F0), highest pitch, lowest pitch, habitual volume, Jitter, Shimmer, maximal phonation time (MPT), noise to harmonic ratio (NHR) and formants frequencies(F1, F2, F3, F4). SPSS 25.0 software was used for statistically analysis. Results: Three months after surgery, the score of TVQMtF was significantly decreased [(89.9±14.7) vs. (50.4±13.6), t=11.49, P<0.001]. The F0 was significantly elevated [(152.7±23.3) Hz vs. (207.7±45.9) Hz, t=-6.03, P<0.001]. Frequencies of F1, F2 and F3 were significantly elevated. No statistical difference was observed in the frequencies of F4. The highest pitch was not significantly altered while the lowest pitch was significantly elevated [(96.8±17.7) Hz vs. (120.0±28.9) Hz, t=-3.71, P=0.001]. Habitual speech volume was significantly increased [(60.0±5.2) dB vs. (63.6±9.6) dB, t=-2.12, P=0.043]. Jitter, Shimmer, NHR and MPT were not obviously altered (P>0.05). Conclusions: Wendler Glottoplasty could notably elevate the vocal pitch, formants frequencies and degree of vocal femininity in transgender women without affecting phonation ability and voice quality. It can be an effective treatment modality for voice feminization.
Humans
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Male
;
Female
;
Young Adult
;
Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
Transgender Persons
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Speech Acoustics
;
Voice Quality
;
Phonation
8.Feasibility of speech telerehabilitation for a patient with Parkinson's Disease in a low-resource country during the pandemic: A case report
Francis Exequiel M. Laxamana ; Carl Froilan D. Leochico ; Adrian I. Espiritu ; Gabrielle Ionne T. Sy ; Reynaldo R. Rey-Matias ; Roland Dominic G. Jamora
Acta Medica Philippina 2022;56(12):74-80
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a chronic, neurodegenerative condition resulting in various motor impairments, including speech disorders. However, at the height of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, a patient with PD could not access traditional in-person neurorehabilitation care. This case report highlights the feasibility of telerehabilitation to deliver speech therapy over a distance using available resources in a developing country.
We describe a Filipino elderly woman, public speaker, and marriage counselor, seeking teleconsultation for her voice problems (slow and soft) attributed to PD. At that time, most center-based outpatient rehabilitation centers in Manila were closed due to the pandemic, and the patient preferred to stay at home for safety reasons. Hence, she was evaluated and managed remotely by an interdisciplinary team (neurologist, physiatrist, speech-language pathologist) through video calls. Since the ideal rehabilitation set up (in-person evaluation and therapy; use of Lee Silverman Voice Therapy) could not be done, the clinicians had to find practical alternatives, such as remotely administering subjective perceptual voice assessments, objective speech analysis using the Praat™ computer application, and speech teletherapy through synchronous (videocalls, phone calls) and asynchronous (e-mails, text messages, pre-recorded exercise videos) techniques.
Notable speech improvements were observed by the clinicians, patient, and patient’s frequent communicative partners after at least four teletherapy sessions. However, the carry-over of the improvements was affected by the patient’s lack of compliance with the prescribed home exercise program.
Telerehabilitation using synchronous and asynchronous techniques for speech disorders due to PD was found feasible, beneficial, safe, and practical amid social distancing and low resources in a developing country
Speech Therapy
;
Telerehabilitation
;
Parkinson Disease
;
Voice Disorders
;
COVID-19
9.Initial outcomes of endoscopic CO2 laser posterior cordectomy and partial arytenoidectomy among patients with bilateral vocal cord paralysis: A Case series.
Karen Joyce S VELASCO ; Anna Pamela C DELA CRUZ ; Ryner Jose D CARILLO ; Daryl Anne D MADRID
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2022;37(2):30-33
Objective:
To describe the initial outcomes of endoscopic CO2 laser posterior cordectomy and partial arytenoidectomy among patients with bilateral vocal cord paralysis in our institution.
Methods:
Design: Case Series
Setting: Tertiary National University Hospital
Participants: 17 Patients
Results:
Seventeen (17) patients who underwent transoral posterior cordectomy and partial arytenoidectomy using carbon dioxide laser were included in the study consisting of 14 females and 3 males. Iatrogenic injury was the most common cause of bilateral vocal cord paralysis in this subset of patients. Five patients who tolerated decannulation and another six who had no preoperative tracheostomy all reported subjective improvement in breathing. All of them were also observed to have resolution of stridor and increased respiratory comfort compared to their preoperative condition. The most common postoperative complication was granuloma formation at the medial arytenoidectomy site occurring only in 4 patients. None of the patients complained of aspiration episodes or dysphagia during the postoperative period.
Conclusion
Our initial experience with transoral endoscopic posterior cordectomy and partial arytenoidectomy using carbon dioxide laser has good postoperative outcomes among patients with bilateral vocal cord paralysis.
Human
;
Male
;
Paralysis
;
Vocal Cord Paralysis
;
Vocal Cords
;
Carbon Dioxide
;
Tracheostomy
;
Voice Quality
10.Descriptive survey on the practice patterns of Filipino speech-language pathologists on voice disorders
Kathy B. Reyes ; Kerwyn Jim C. Chan
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development 2021;25(3):15-26
Purpose:
Filipino speech-language pathologists (SLPs) face challenges in applying evidence-based practice (EBP) due to lack of training, exposure, and experience. Without EBP being embedded in the educational curricula and clinical practice guidelines (CPGs), SLPs will continue to face barriers in providing evidencebased services. This study aimed to map the practice patterns of SLPs on voice disorders and benchmark these practices with international evidence-based practice guidelines.
Methodology:
A cross-sectional descriptive survey design was used. Seventeen out of 61 (28%) Filipino SLPs with clinical experience in voice disorders responded to an online survey form. The form was composed of these sections: (1) Practice Profile, (2) Etiologies of Voice Disorders, (3) Case Study, and (4) Clinical Practice Perspectives. The quantitative and qualitative data sets were analyzed to obtain the practice profiles of SLPs and identify gaps in relation to established evidence-based practice patterns.
Results:
The study revealed that 70% (n=12) of clinicians fall within five years of practice and work at hospitals. Majority of their clients are adults between 26 to 80 years old. On average, clinicians see one to two clients with voice disorders every week and hold around seven to nine voice therapy sessions prior to discharge. Structural pathologies were the most frequent etiology reported. Content analysis revealed that clinicians rely on the use of clinical experience and patient values for assessment and intervention of voice disorders.
Conclusion
The findings suggest that Filipino SLPs managing voice disorders predominantly rely on clinical experience and patient values for clinical decision-making. They sparsely use external evidence in assessment, differential diagnosis, and intervention which might compromise the quality of care. To ensure the best patient care, EBP needs to be incorporated in undergraduate education, professional development, and regulatory requirements of the Philippine Association of Speech Pathologists.
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
;
;
Voice Disorders


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