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Neurogenic Voice Disorders

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Acta Neurologica Scandinavica. 113(2), 92-99 Duffy, J.R. (2005). Motor Speech Disorders: Substrates, Differential Diagnosis, and Management. Elsevier Mosby : St. Louis. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neurogenic Voice Disorders


1
Neurogenic Voice Disorders
  • Courtney Lippe
  • Kristina Curro

2
Organic Voice Disorders
  • Structural involve something physically wrong
    with a speech mechanism.
  • Neurogenic are caused by a problem with the CNS
    or PNS.

3
Spasmodic Dysphonia
  • SD is characterized by abnormal involuntary
    movements that are action induced and task
    specific Stemple et al.
  • Movement during vocalization that produces
    involuntary co-contraction of the muscles used to
    produce sound.
  • Normal structure!

4
Spasmodic Dysphonia
  • 3 types Adductor vs. Abductor and rare form of
    mixed dysphonia
  • Recent evidence suggest that it is a focal
    dystonia of the CNS
  • Extrapyramidal in origin
  • Supranuclear lesion locus in area of the Basal
    Ganglia

5
Spasmodic DysphoniaComplaints
  • Poor vocal quality
  • Loss of vocal control
  • Rapid fatigue and strain involved in speech
  • Cannot be understood due to decrease in
    intelligibility

6
Spasmodic Dysphonia
  • Diane Rehm NPR talk radio voice

7
Spasmodic Dysphonia Treatments
  • Midline type 2 Thyroplasty (surgical)
  • Sectioning or removal of the recurrent laryngeal
    nerve (surgical)
  • Botox injection
  • Chiropractics (derotation of 1st and 2nd
    vertebrae)
  • Behavioral therapy

8
Midline type 2 Thyroplasty
9
(No Transcript)
10
Benign Essential Tremor
  • Neurologic movement disorder that primarily
    involve upper body and limbs but can also involve
    head, voice, tongue or palate
  • Not related to any other disease process
  • Usually absent at rest
  • Average age of onset 45 years

11
Benign Essential Tremor
Katherine Hepburn
12
Benign Essential Tremor Complaints
  • Poor vocal quality
  • old sounding voice
  • Decrease in volume
  • Fatigue with vocal use

13
Benign Essential Tremor
  • Team neurologist, otolaryngologist and speech
    Language Pathologist
  • There is no cure for organic voice tremor but the
    symptoms can be treated.
  • Botox is an option if there is co-occuring
    spasticity
  • Speech therapy to improve respiratory support
  • Prognosis poor

14
Current Therapy
  • Beta-adrenergic blockers(medication)
  • Primidone(medication)
  • Benzodiazepines(medication)
  • Botulinum A(injections)
  • Alcohol
  • Thalamotomy(surgical)
  • Thalamic Stimulation(surgical)
  • Non-Pharmacologic Treatment

15
Neurogenic Vocal Fold Paralysis
Figure 5. Unilateral vocal cord paralysis. (Left)
Larynx in abduction. (Right) Larynx in adduction,
showing paralyzed vocal cord (arrow).
16
Vocal Fold Paralysis
  • Nerve impulses to the vocal folds are either
    partially or completely interrupted which
    results in limited or no movement of the muscles
    of the larynx.
  • Can occur at any age
  • Results Voice changes, problems with airway,
    dysphagia

17
Complaints
  • Hoarseness
  • Breathy
  • Diplophonia
  • Shortness of breath
  • Stridor
  • Ineffective cough
  • Coughing or choking with food
  • globus sensation

18
Neurologic Causes
  • Arnold-Chiari malformation
  • Meningomyelocele
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
  • Myasthenia Gravis
  • Mobius syndrome
  • Charcot-Marie-Tooth syndrome
  • Postpolio syndrome
  • Lyme Disease

19
Medical Therapy
  • Corticosteroids work for some conditions
  • Glucose management for diabetes
  • Reflux medication

20
Parkinsonss Disease/Parkinsonism/resulting in
Hypokinetic Dysarthria
  • Cause/Site of lesion Degeneration of the
    substantia nigra, causing a decrease in the
    amount of dopamine in the brain and thereby
    inhibiting movement.
  • Drug-induced, such as exposure to heroin
  • Post-encephalitic, thought to be due to exposure
    to a virus, although evidence is weak at best.
  • Idiopathic, possibly due to the aging process or
    heredity.

21
Vocal quality complaints
  • Hard to get speech started
  • Quiet or weak voice
  • Fatigue during speech
  • Reports stuttering, or repeating sounds or
    words.

22
  • Hypokinetic dysarthria voice characteristics
    (Duffy, 2005)

23
Phonation
  • Mono-pitch
  • Mono-loudness
  • Harsh Voice Quality
  • Breathy voice
  • Low pitch (reduced f0)
  • Reduced intensity
  • Voice tremor
  • Increased jitter/shimmer

24
Respiration
  • Reduced maximum vowel prolongation
  • Reduced airflow
  • Reduced respiratory excursions
  • Reduced vital capacity
  • Paradoxical respiratory movements

25
Articulation/Prosody
  • Reduces Stress
  • Imprecise Consonants
  • Variable Rate
  • Repeated phonemes
  • Inappropriate pauses
  • Continued voicing during voiceless consonants

26
Resonance
  • Increased nasalization is possible, but usually
    normal.

27
Laryngeal Characteristics
  • Bowed vocal folds despite solid, non-flaccid
    appearance
  • Tremulousness of arytenoid cartilages
  • Asymmetry of structure movement

28
Treatment options and effectiveness
  • LSVT to promote volume and breath support (Ramig
    and Verdolini, 1996)
  • Prosodic exercises (as reported in Scott and
    Caird, 1983, from Ramig and Verdolini, 1996)

29
Drug Treatment
  • Most drug treatment is for PD in general, not
    specifically for treatment of the voice disorder
    itself.
  • levodopa-carbidopa (dopamine precursors),
    bromocriptine (dopamine agonist) etc. (Kolb and
    Wishaw, 1996)

30
Surgical Treatment
  • Collagen injection into vocal folds (Sewall et
    al. 2006) to improve glottal closure. Pt.
    subjectively reported improvement of vocal
    quality (Vocal Handicap Index), and objective
    CAPE-V measurements also showed improvement.
    However, small sample size and short duration of
    monitoring.
  • Deep brain stimulation and fetal cell
    transplantation were shown to help reduce overall
    symptoms of PD, but had a negative impact on
    speech quality (Trail et al. 2005)

31
Other Treatments
  • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (Dias et al.,
    2006) showed that stimulating the primary motor
    cortex (M1)-mouth area provided objective and
    subjective improvements in speech and may be used
    in future treatment.

32
Prognosis
  • New research suggests a combination of LSVT and
    collagen injections may provide the greatest
    improvement to voice quality.
  •  

33
Flaccid Dysarthria
  • Cause/Site of lesion Lower motor neuron
    involvement. In Myasthenia Gravis (MG) Failure
    of neuromuscular transmission wherein
    acetylcholine degrades too quickly because the
    immune system attacks its own AchRs. This lack
    of Ach reaching the neuronal terminals causes
    flaccid dysarthria that recovers after a period
    of rest.

34
Complaints
  • Breathy or quiet voice, inability to move
    articulators
  • In MG Weakness and fatigue after muscle use, for
    example, weakness increases towards the end of a
    conversation, and recovers with a period of rest

35
Phonation
  • Breathiness
  • Short phrases
  • Audible inspiration

36
Respiration
  • Insufficient breath support, although isolated
    respiration difficulty is rare.
  • Poor posture
  • Reduced exhalation control
  • Slow breathing

37
Articulation/Prosody
  • Harsh voice
  • Monoloudness
  • Monopitch

38
Resonance
  • Imprecise consonants (although this occurs with
    may other dysarthrias)
  • Increased nasalization and nasal emission (may be
    the first sign of ALS)

39
Treatment options and effectiveness
  • MG General treatment includes thymectomy to
    reduce antibody formation, but its effect on
    voice treatment specifically is not addressed.
  • Thyroplasty surgery to enhance function of the
    larynx
  • Palatal lifts if the velum is affected

40
Ataxic dysarthria
  • Location/site of lesion bilateral cerebellar
    involvement
  • Complaints of patient imprecise articulation,
    laborious speech, may be observed groping for
    sounds, sound substitution

41
Phonation
  • Breathy
  • Hoarse
  • Tremor
  • Mono-pitch
  • Mono-loudness

42
Respiration
  • Shallow inhalation and reduced exhalation control
  • Rapid breaths
  • Irregular and suddenly forced patterns

43
Articultion/Prosody
  • Imprecise, slow and irregular
  • Explosive syllable stress
  • Explosive loudness, outbursts
  • Abnormal prolongations of phonemes

44
Treatment options and effectiveness
  • Intense phonomotor treatment (Kendall et al.
    2006) in a single case study found that intense
    phonomotor treatment increased ease of production
    of single sounds but generalization to connected
    speech did not occur.
  •  

45
References
  • Cannito, Michael P. et al. Perceptual Analysis of
    Spasmodic Dysphonia Before and After. Arch
    Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg.,1301393-1399
  • Daya, Hamid FRCS et al.(2006) Pediatric Vocal
    Fold Paralysis. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck
    Surg.,vol 12621-25
  • Dias, A.E., Barbosa, E.R., Coracini, K., Maia,
    F., Marcolin, M. A., Fregni, F. (2006). Effects
    of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation
    on voice and speech in Parkinson's disease. Acta
    Neurologica Scandinavica. 113(2), 92-99
  • Duffy, J.R. (2005). Motor Speech Disorders
    Substrates, Differential Diagnosis, and
    Management. Elsevier Mosby St. Louis.
  • Dworkin, J.P. (1991). Motor Speech Disorders.
    Mosby New York.
  • Dysphonia by Surgical Myectomy A Preliminary
    Report. Annals of Otology, Rhinology
    Laryngology. 115(2)97-102, 2006.

46
References
  • Kendall, D.L., Rodriguez A.D., Rosenbek, J.C.,
    Conway T., Gonzalez Rothi L.J.Influence of
    intensive phonomotor rehabilitation on apraxia of
    speech. Journal of Rehabilitation Research and
    Development. 43(3). 409-18
  • Kolb, B., Wishaw, I.Q. (1996). Fundamentals of
    Human Neuropsychology 4th Edition. W.H.
    Freeman Company New York.
  • Neurogenic dysphonia (1994). Ann Otol Rhinol
    Laryngol. Jan-Feb93(1 Pt 1)57-64. PMID
    6703599 PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE
  • Rajish, Pahwa. (2003) Essential Tremor
    differential diagnosis and current therapy. The
    American Journal of Medicine. 115(2), 134-142

47
References
  • Ramig, L.O., Verdolini, K. (1998). Treatment
    Efficacy, Voice Disorders. Journal of Speech,
    Language, and Hearing Research. 41(1), S101
    S116.
  • Sapienza CM, Murry T, Brown WS (1998) Variations
    in adductor spasmodic dysphonia Acoustic
    evidence. J Voice, 12(2) 214-222
  • Stemple, J.C., Glaze, L.E., Klaben, B.G. (2000).
    Clinical Voice Pathology- Third Edition. Singular
    Publishing Group Canada.
  • Sewall G.K., Jiang J., Ford C.N. (2006).
    Clinical evaluation of Parkinsons related
    dysphonia. Laryngoscope. Oct116(10)1740-4
  • Trail, M., Fox, C., Ramig, L.O., Sapire, S.,
    Howard, J, and Lai, E.C. (2005). Speech
    treatment for Parkinsons Disease.
    NeuroRehabilitation. 20, 205221.
  • http//www.parkinsonsdisease-rhodeisland.org/Treat
    ing20the20voice.htm as retrieved on 3/1/2007.
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