Transcript lecture 7

Neurogenic Voice Disorders

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Innervation: Vocal Folds

Main Cranial Nerve:

Vagus (X)

-Divides into left & right branches, then further divides into 3 branches, 1) Pharyngeal 2) Superior laryngeal 3) Recurrent laryngeal

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Vagus Nerve Branches Superior Pharyngeal Constrictor Muscle Vagus Nerve (x)

Nucleus Ambiguus Jugular Foramen

Middle Pharyngeal Constrictor Muscle Pharyngeal Branch Superior Laryngeal Nerve Inferior Pharyngeal Constrictor Muscle Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve

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Pharyngeal Branch

Innervate pharyngeal middle constrictor

Subdivide & join branches from sympathetic trunk, external laryngeal & glossopharyngeal nerves= Pharyngeal plexus

Plexus supplies innervation to pharynx & muscles of velum

Lesions here result in:

adductor paralysis & velopharyngeal paralysis.

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Superior Laryngeal Nerve Branches

Divide into internal & external branches 1) Internal laryngeal nerve: -Divides further: upper & lower branches

Both provide afferent info (sensory) 1. Upper: Supplies mucous membranes of epiglottis & vestibule of larynx 2. Lower: Motor supply to CT 2) External laryngeal nerve:

Controls cricothyroid muscle

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Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Branches

Divides into right & left 1) Right & left recurrent nerves: -Innervate all intrinsic muscles except the CT.

-Involved in sensory supply of subglottic mucous membranes

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Branches of Vagus & Result of Lesion

Pharyngeal Branch : muscles of velum (levator & levator veli palatini) are affected one or both sides.

Superior Laryngeal Branch : CT muscle affected on one or both sides.

Recurrent Laryngeal Branch : All intrinsic laryngeal muscles are affected unilaterally or bilaterally resulting in fixed abduction position.

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Lesions & Disorders Causing Hypoadduction 1) Lesions that damage vagal nuclei within the brainstem or “intramedullary” -Lesion occurs after nerves leave the skull= “extracranial” -Damage before leaving the skull but outside the brainstem itself= “extramedullary” -All intra- & extramedullary and extracranial lesions occur before vagus separates into branches (RLN, SLN, pharyngeal)

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Brainstem Lesions

1 ) Affecting nuclei of right and left vagus nerves: -results in bilateral paresis or paralysis of pharyngeal & laryngeal muscles, -affects sensory function, -both folds may be involved and are abducted -airway is without protection, -fortunately unilateral lesions occur more than bilateral.

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Symptoms

• • • • • • • • •

A) Unilateral lesions: unilateral v.f. paralysis breathiness and aphonia tremorous vowel prolongation's reduced loudness reduced endurance lowered pitch diplophonia hypernasal resonance swallowing problems

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Symptoms

• • • • • • • •

B) Bilateral lesions: bilat. v.f. paralysis open glottis almost total absence of vibration marked hypernasality distorted pressure consonants absent or weak cough absent or weak gag reflex dysphagia (nasal regurgitation on swallowing)

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Superior & Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Lesions 1) SLN & RLN: -Do not create velar problems -Result in all of the preceding laryngeal symptoms listed -If the paralysis is complete, intracranial studies should be ordered by the physician 2) SLN alone or extracranial lesions: -Affect CT muscle and impact on pitch -Suspected when one fold lags in adduction

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Symptoms: SLN Lesions

Loss of high pitches

Instability in the upper range

Breathiness and weakness

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Bilateral SLN Paralysis Symptoms

• • • • • • • •

Thyroid cartilage will not tilt on the cricoid cartilage during phonation v.f.’s appear short v.f.’s appear bowed Epiglottis overhangs the anterior part of the v.f.’s Breathy or hoarse quality Reduced loudness Ability to alter pitch is impaired Singing is difficult

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Inferior RLN Lesions

Result in paralysis of all intrinsic laryngeal muscles of the larynx with the exception of the CT

CT assumes a compensatory function and adducts

Folds may be positioned at midline or paramedian position rather than in an adducted position

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Unilateral RLN Paralysis Symptoms

Reduced airway

Weak cough

Reduced loudness

Diplophonia

Pitch breaks

Breathy, hoarse quality

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Bilateral RLN Involvement

Major concern is maintenance of airway, not phonation

Folds approximate at midline

Voice may sound normal

Abductor muscles are paralyzed, serious respiratory distress occurs

Stridor during inhalation is common

Requires tracheotomy

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Lower Motor Neuron Disease: Bilateral muscle weakness

• • • • • • • • • •

Incomplete adduction of the folds Bowing of folds Inhalation stridor (as condition worsens) Hypernasality Nasal emission Reduced loudness Restricted pitch range Breathy, hoarse quality Tremor on prolonged vowels Phonemic distortions

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LMN Disease: Respiratory Disorders

May coexist with flaccid dysphonia

Lesions of cervical, thoracic or lumbar spinal nerves may result in weakness & atrophy of speech muscles & flaccid dysarthria

Lesions may result from: trauma, tumors, & myoneural junction disease

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LMN Disease: Respiratory Disorders

Weakness in respiratory muscles results in: -Reduced lung volume -Reduced expiratory force -Limitations in subglottic air pressure

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LMN Disease: Voice Related Symptoms

• • • • • • •

Increased number of breaths per minute Diminished tidal volume Breathiness because of weak vocal fold adductors Short breath groups Inhalatory stridor if abductors can’t open glottis wide enough

Decreased loudness because of hypofunctional laryngeal valving Dysphagia Minimal intonation, stress, loudness variation

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Management Strategies

• • • • • •

Postural changes and support Family counseling Physical therapy Respiratory therapy Mechanical ventilation Palatal lift prosthesis if VP inadequacy/flaccidity

Voice therapy to improve speech breathing and laryngeal adduction

Alternative communication strategies

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Spasmodic Dysphonia

• •

Primary Voice Symptom: Strain/Struggle Description & Etiology:

Focal dystonia affecting laryngeal muscle control

Occurs equally in women & men

Onset in middle aged

Onset: related to URI, traumatic emotional event, begins as mild hoarseness (may be rapid or take many years

Etiologies include: Psyhcogenic, neurological (basal ganglia)

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Spasmodic Dysphonia

Perceptual Voice Signs & Symptoms:

Adductor-

• • • •

Struggle & strain with intermittent voice stoppage Hoarseness, harshness & tremor Creaky, tense, choked Perceptual- Strain/struggle, sudden interruption of voicing, loudness & pitch variation

Abductor-

• • •

Intermittent episodes of breathy phonation Drops in pitch & vowel prolongation's Perceptual- Delay of voice onset following voiceless consonant

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Spasmodic Dysphonia

• •

Acoustic Signs:

Fundamental Frequency-

Adductor (women-162 Hz; men-134Hz)

Greater variation of fundamental frequency

Vocal Intensity-

Variation of amplitude

Reduced in conversation Measurable Physiological Signs:

Airflow low & within normal limits (different studies)

Abductor-High

Adductor-Low

Pressure higher (13-14 cm H 2 0)

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Spasmodic Dysphonia

Observable Physiological Signs:

Laryngoscopy-

Larynx appears normal

During phonation, hyperadduction(adductor), Inefficient closure (abductor), bowed vocal folds

True & ventricular fold tremor

Stroboscopy-

Hard to visualize due to not being able to sustain phonation

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Spasmodic Dysphonia

Other Considerations:

Other neurological signs-

• • • • • • •

Voice tremor Jaw Facial jerks Hand or limb tremor Hyperflexia Sucking reflex Asymmetries in the face or palate

Possible etiologies-

Brainstem abnormalities due to organic CNS disease which slows conduction within brainstem auditory pathway-

Patients show abnormal ABR (capacity of brainstem to conduct impulses is impaired)

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Spasmodic Dysphonia

Differentiating SD:

Similar features- SD, psychogenic dysphonia, musculoskeletal tension

History important & reveals differences

Psychogenic - stress, dysphonia clearly defined during stressful periods, variable (normal sometimes), respond well to voice therapy

SD - report increased stress since onset of dysphonia, minimal variability in normal productions, spasmodic not constant, do not respond well to voice therapy

Hyperfunction - consistent symptoms, do not vary phonemically, consistent vocal tension (not episodic), responds well to therapy

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Case # 3 (CD 1; Track 3)

History:

70 year old female

1 year history of progressive worsening dysphonia

Intermittent periods of voice arrest & a “Squeezing” sensation during conversational speech

Active participant in a family owned business

No smoking

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Case # 3 (CD 1; Track 3)

Examination Findings:

Oriented, no signs of language or cognitive impairment

Cranial nerve exam was unremarkable

Perceptually breathy voice quality

When asked to increase loudness- moderate-severe tremor and strain/strangled quality ensued

Acoustic Analysis-

Maximum phonation time= less than 5 seconds

Fundamental frequency= 165 Hz

Jitter= 1.3%

Shimmer= 0.84 dB

Harmonic-to-noise ratio= 6.5 dB

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Case # 3 (CD 1; Track 3)

Aerodynamic findings-

• • • • • •

Mean airflow rate= 685 cc/sec (whispered) Mean airflow rate= 23 cc/sec (when urged to phonate) Subglottal pressure= 16 cm H 2 0 (whispered) Subglottal pressure= 22 cm H 2 0 (when urged to phonate) Glottal resistance= 20 cm H 2 0 /lps (whispering) Glottal resistance= 92 cm H 2 0 /lps (when urged to phonate)

Stroboscopic-

• • •

small nodules on middle 1/3 Persistent chink in posterior glottis Prolonged closure time

Diagnosis: ?

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Case # 3: Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia with Tremor 32

Case # 3 (CD 1; Track 3)

Treatment Results-

10 sessions of voice therapy

Easy onset voice production

Increasing pitch

Humming

Sing song

Manual stabilization of the larynx

Visipitch for biofeedback

Unilateral Botox injections were recommended

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Myasthenia Gravis

• • •

Progressive neurological disease

Manifests itself in the muscles supplied by vagus nerve

Progressive flaccid weakness or paralysis elated to muscular effort Initially when a patient reads or speaks for a long time, gradual decrease in control of muscles of the velum and larynx Change from normal quality to hypernasal, breathy or hoarse

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Management of Myasthenia Gravis

• •

Corticosteroids anticholinesterase drugs to improve the action of the neurotransmitter chemical acetylcholine

• • •

removal of thymus gland adrenocorticotrophic hormone therapy palatal lift prosthesis to compensate for velar inadequacy

voice therapy to increase hyperadduction if medical treatment does not work

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Upper Motor Neuron Disorders: Supra or Pseudobulbar Palsy Primary Voice Symptom:

Hoarseness or harshness

Description & Etiology:

Pyramidal & extrapyramidal tracts

2 major pathway systems that converge on lower motor neurons that control muscles of voice & speech

1) Damage to extrapyramidal (indirect pathway) results in spasticity & increased muscle reflexes

2) Damage to pyramidal (direct pathway) results in loss of function or skilled movements

– –

Lesions may occur in both tracts as they are close in proximity Effects to voluntary movement:

Spasticity, weakness, limitation of range, slowing movement

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Pseudobulbar Palsy

Description & Etiology (cont.):

Results from progressive lesions that occur bilaterally in the corticobulbar tracts

Lesions usually result of stroke, cerebral palsy, brain injury, multiple sclerosis & arteriosclerosis

Symptoms:

Difficulty with speech & swallowing

Emotional lability

Bursts of laughter or crying

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Pseudobulbar Palsy

Perceptual voice signs & symptoms:

Dysarthria of speech

Prosodic excess (excess rate & stress)

Prosodic insufficiency (monopitch, monoloudness, reduced stress, short phrases)

Articulatory-resonatory incompetence (imprecise consonants, distorted vowels, hypernasality)

Phonatory stenosis (harsh voice, strain/struggle, pitch breaks)

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Pseudobulbar Palsy

• •

Acoustic Signs:

Fundamental frequency= 124.1 Hz in men

equal or slightly higher than normal

Reduced variability of fundamental frequency

Reduced intensity variation Measurable Physiological Signs:

Higher than normal subglottal pressure

Hypertonicity, strain/struggle

If breathy- Higher than normal airflow's

Slow opening & closing times, short closed time

inability to maintain sufficient muscle forces

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Pseudobulbar Palsy

Observable Physiological Signs:

Laryngoscopy-

No laryngeal abnormalities

Vocal fold hyperadduction may be visible

Stroboscopy-

Reduced vocal fold amplitude

Diminished mucosal wave

Excessive glottal closure

Asymmetry, aperiodicity

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Parkinson’s

• •

Primary Voice Symptom:

Monopitch Description & Etiology:

Progressive, degenerative disease of the central nervous system affecting basal ganglia (substantia nigra)

Decrease in dopamine in caudate nucleus & putamen

Results in rigidity, resting tremor & reduced range of movement in the limbs, neck & head

• •

Absence of facial expression Decreased initiating movement of command

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Parkinson’s

Description & Etiology (cont.):

Muscles not paralyzed but hypokinetic

Respiratory movements impaired- Shallow, irregular breathing cycle

Limited vital & inspiratory capacity

Affect the ability to produce normal loudness & length speech

Causes:

• • • •

Unknown Linked to encephalitis lethargica Slow-growing virus Head trauma

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Parkinson’s

Perceptual Voice Signs & Symptoms:

Monopitch

Excessively low pitch

Harshness

Variability of loudness & rate

Caused by muscle rigidity & hypokinesia

Acoustic Signs:

Fundamental frequency within the normal range

Greater variation of fundamental frequency in sustained vowels

• •

Higher jitter values Lower SNR

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Parkinson’s

Measurable Physiological Signs:

Higher activity in the interarytenoid & posterior cricoarytenoid muscles

Greater activity in lip muscles

Observable Physiological Signs:

Laryngoscopy-

• • •

Diminished vocal fold movement Bowed vocal folds Greater amplitude

Stroboscopy-

• • •

Mild glottal incompetence Tremor Abnormal phase closure & phase symmetry

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Case 9 (CD 1; Track 9)

History:

72 year old male

12 month history of progressive dysphonia

18 months ago he was diagnosed as having Parkinson’s disease

• • • •

Masklike face Hand tremor Shuffling gait Stooped posture

Speech articulation was mildly imprecise

• •

Moderate decrease of prosodic quality Slow rate

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Case 9 (CD 1; Track 9)

Examination Findings:

Perceptually: Moderately hoarse-breathy quality & volume was markedly reduced, pitch variations were undetectable

Maximum phonation time was WNL

Acoustic-

• • • •

Fundamental Frequency= 244 Hz Jitter= .87% Shimmer= .65 dB Harmonic to noise= 6.9 dB

Aerodynamic-

• • •

Mean airflow rate= 336 cc/sec Subglottal pressure= 9 cm H 2 0 Glottal resistance= 7.6 cm H 2 0/lps

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Case 9 (CD 1; Track 9)

Stroboscopic-

Mild atrophy of left vocal fold

Persistent glottal incompetence

Elliptical shaped chink in middle third of vocal folds

Moderate stiffness

Diagnosis: Hypokinetic dysarthria secondary to Parkinson’s

Voice therapy 2 x per week was recommended

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Case 9: Hypokinetic Dysarthria Secondary to Parkinson’s Disease

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Case 9 (CD 1; Track 9)

Treatment Results:

15 voice sessions

Increasing laryngeal resistance & loudness control utilizing various vocal fold medialization techniques

Pushing on arms of chair, pulling up on bottom of chair, squeezing palms of hands together and simultaneously producing voice

Visipitch- Vocal loudness biofeedback

Isolated vowel efforts, single words, phrases, sentences & conversational speech

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Readings

Colton & Casper: Ch. 5

Next Directed Reading (For:10/21/99):

Verdolini-Martson, K., Sandage, M., & Titze, I. (1994). Effect of Hydration Treatments on Laryngeal Nodules and Polyps and Related Voice Measures,

Journal of Voice, 8,

30-47.

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