Title of article :
Dysphonia in Performers: Toward a Clinical Definition of Laryngology of the Performing Voice
Author/Authors :
Joel Guss، نويسنده , , Babak Sadoughi، نويسنده , , Brian Benson، نويسنده , , Lucian Sulica، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
Objectives To identify causes of dysphonia in performers and compare causes and aspects of treatment of dysphonia in performers and nonperformers. Study Design Case-control study. Methods A chart review of all new patients presenting with a chief complaint of dysphonia over a 1-year period was performed. The prevalence of laryngeal disorders was reviewed and differences between performers and nonperformers were analyzed. The odds ratio of the prevalence of each disorder was computed against performer status as a risk factor. Results Four hundred seventy-six new patients complaining of dysphonia presented over 12 months; 74 were vocal performers. The median duration of symptoms in performers was 90 days. Phonotraumatic lesions were significantly more prevalent in performers (63.5% vs 28.6%, Pآ <آ 0.001), particularly bilateral mid-fold swelling (4-fold increase in performers), pseudocysts (3-fold increase), and vocal fold hemorrhage/ectasia. Neurologic disorders (vocal fold paralysis and spasmodic dysphonia), neoplastic pathologies, and age-related phenomena (atrophy/presbyphonia) were significantly more common in nonperformers. Overall and diagnosis-specific rates of surgical intervention were equal between the two groups. Conclusions Phonotraumatic injury is responsible for the majority of dysphonia in vocal performers, to a significantly greater extent than in nonperformers and requires the implementation of standard therapeutic strategies. Awareness of the specific risks and management needs of the performer is of paramount importance to the practice of laryngology of the performing voice.
Keywords :
Performing voice , Dysphonia , Phonotrauma
Journal title :
Journal of Voice
Journal title :
Journal of Voice