Voice Disorders
Part 1: Background
What is a Voice Disorder?
A voice disorder occurs when voice quality, pitch, and loudness differ or are inappropriate for an individual’s age, gender, cultural background, or geographic location. A voice disorder is present when an individual expresses concern about having an abnormal voice that does not meet daily needs—even if others do not perceive it as different or deviant.
Signs that a voice disorder is present:
- Strained, hoarse, croaky, shaky or strangled voice quality
- Breathy or hoarse voice quality that is difficult to be heard Tiredness (from increased effort) after speaking
- A voice that doesn’t carry well over background noise
- No speech production
- A feeling that it is an effort to use voice
- Frequent throat-clearing or coughing
- A voice that does not have the usual variability in pitch range or variation
Any of the above symptoms can be seen as a result of the vocal folds not working properly
Voice Disorders that are common with Acquired Brain Injury:
- Dysphonia
- Symptoms come from more than one source. Some people appear to have nervous system changes that produce an organic tremor of the vocal cords. In rare cases, people can have spasmodic dysphonia symptoms because of acute or chronic life stress.
- Vocal fold paralysis
- Everyone has two vocal cords in his or her larynx (voice box). The vocal cords vibrate during speech to produce voice. If one or both vocal cords are unable to move then the person will experience voice problems and possibly breathing and swallowing problems. There are different types of vocal cord paralysis.(2) Vocal fold paralysis.
Part II: Voice Evaluation
General Goal of Voice Therapy: To establish long-term vocal quality without recurrence of the voice disorder
Components of a Voice Evaluation:
- Medical History and Physical Examination
- Voice related History
- Patient ratings of vocal function and impact of the disorder
- Videostroboscopy, perceptual, acoustic and laryngeal function studies
- Evaluation of response to therapeutic Probes
Step 1: Gather a Case History
- What is the patient’s age, occupation and social history?
- Onset of the voice disorder: When? Sudden vs. gradual?
- Patient’s perception of their voice (what bothers you, how much?)
- What have you done about it?
- Relevant medical history (illness, medication)
- Relevant behavioral History
Step 2: Reflux Symptom Index:
Within the last MONTH, how did the following problems affect you?
0 = no problem
5 = severe problem
- Hoarseness or a problem with your voice
- Clearing your throat
- Excess throat mucous or postnasal drip
- Difficulty swallowing food, liquids, or pills
- Coughing after you ate or after lying down
- Breathing difficulties or choking episodes
- Troublesome or annoying cough
- Sensations of something sticking in your throat or a lump in your throat
- Heartburn, chest pain, indigestion, or stomach acid coming up
Step 3: Assess the impact of Voice on the Patient’s quality of life
- Ask the patient questions about how much their voice disorder affects their activities of daily living
Step 4: Videostroboscopy and perceptual, acoustic and laryngeal function studies
Step 5: Continuous evaluation of response to therapeutic probes
Part III: Voice Treatment
What does the first therapy session look like?
- Patient Education
- Diagnosis
- Pathophysiology (What is physiologically going on?_
- Explain the Anatomy and Physiology of normal voice production
- Goal Setting:
- What would the patient like to get out of voice therapy?
- Short and Long term?
- Introduce the Therapy Program
- Hygiene Program
- Vocal Exercises
- Provide Homework
How do we change unhealthy voice behaviors?
- Indirect Voice Therapy
- Education
- Vocal Hygiene Program
- Voice Rest
- Strategies to optimize vocal fold/laryngeal health
- Direct Voice Therapy
- Exercises/Techniques to change voice production mechanics
Evaluation
- Sample Voice Evaluation Report
- Voice Vibratory Assessment and Laryngeal Imaging VALI Videostroboscopy Rating Form
- Singing Voice Handicap Index SVHI
- Article Consensus Auditory Perceptual Evaluation of Voice_ Development of a Standardized Clinical Protocol
- Voice Handicap Index VHI
- Consensus Auditory Perceptual Evaluation of Voice CAPE V Procedures
- Presentation Voice Evaluation
- Voice Disorder Assessment
- Screening for Voice Disorders
Clinical Resources
- Organic Voice Disorders
- Functional Voice Disorders
- Voice Facilitating Approaches
- Presentation Voice and Communication Therapy for the Transgender Client
- Presentation Pediatric Voice Therapy
- Presentation Transgender Voice Therapy
- Presentation The Voice and Voice Disorders
- Article What_s Special in a Child_s Larynx
- Presentation Organic Pathologies of the Larynx
- Presentation Neurogenic Voice Disorders
- Presentation Medical _ Surgical Approaches to Voice Rehabilitation
- Article Optimal Duration for Voice Rest After Vocal Fold Surgery
- Presentation Head and Neck Cancer
- Presentation Functional Voice Disorders
- Presentation Behavioral Voice Therapy
- Presentation Advanced Respiratory Physiology
- Presentation Advanced Laryngeal Physiology
- Article Principles of Experience Dependent Neural Plasticity_ Implications for Rehabilitation After Brain Damage
- Voice Disorders