Title of article :
Effects of a Vocally Fatiguing Task and Systemic Hydration on Menʹs Voices
Author/Authors :
Nancy Pearl Solomon، نويسنده , , Leslie E. Glaze، نويسنده , , Robert R. Arnold، نويسنده , , Miriam van Mersbergen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
16
From page :
31
To page :
46
Abstract :
: Voice disorders, specifically vocal fatigue, are more commonly reported by women than by men. Previously, 4 women with normal untrained voices read loudly for 2 hours in an attempt to fatigue the voice. Vocal function deteriorated, as indicated by increases in phonation threshold pressure (PTP) and self-perceived phonatory effort. The increase in PTP was delayed or attenuated to some degree in 3 of the women when they drank ample amounts of water before the experiment. The current study examined the same vocal-loading task and water-drinking condition in 4 vocally normal men. PTP increased after the loud-reading task. Although 2 of the men appeared to benefit from increased systemic hydration (PTP increased more when they were underhydrated than well-hydrated), the other 2 menʹs data changed in the opposite direction. Phonatory effort correlated well with PTP; this varied across subject and pitch. Laryngeal endoscopy revealed an anterior glottal gap in two men after the loud-reading task. Amplitude of vocal fold vibration was judged to be reduced after the loud-reading task in three subjects when underhydrated and one subject when well hydrated. The high between-subject variability prohibits a conclusion that drinking water is beneficial to vocal function in men, but all subjects studied to date demonstrated detrimental vocal effects of prolonged loud talking.
Keywords :
Vocal fatigue , Phonation threshold pressure , Systemic hydration , gender differences , Laryngeal appearance , Effort
Journal title :
Journal of Voice
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Journal of Voice
Record number :
1280033
Link To Document :
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