OBJECTIVE: To analyze the value of electromyography in predicting recovery from acute neurogenic vocal fold paralysis. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective case series. SETTING: University-based hospital of otorhinolaryngology-head and neck surgery. PATIENTS: Ninety-eight patients (56 women, with a mean age of 62.2 years; 42 men, with a mean age of 39.8 years) with 111 paralyzed vocal folds. The causes were varied, with thyroid surgery (53 cases) and idiopathic palsy (18 cases) being the predominant factors. INTERVENTION: Prognostication was based on electromyography performed no earlier than 14 days after onset of palsy. Findings were classified as neurapraxy, axonotmesis, and neurotmesis. Prognosis is inherent in this classification, since neurapraxy is presumed to resolve completely within 8 to 12 weeks, whereas axonotmesis is most likely to be followed by impaired vocal fold mobility. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Vocal fold mobility after 6 months. RESULTS: In 102 vocal folds, some palsy of various degree persisted after 6 months. Free mobility of the paralyzed vocal fold was restored in 9 cases. By means of laryngeal electromyography, defective recovery, defined as absence of completely free vocal fold mobility, was predicted correctly in 94.4% of cases (68/72). For complete recovery, prognosis was accurate in only 12.8% of cases (5/39). CONCLUSIONS: The detection of neural degeneration by laryngeal electromyography allows the prediction of poor functional outcome with sufficient reliability in an early phase of the disease process. Conversely, the absence of signs of degeneration does not imply that complete recovery is to be expected.
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the value of electromyography in predicting recovery from acute neurogenic vocal fold paralysis. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective case series. SETTING: University-based hospital of otorhinolaryngology-head and neck surgery. PATIENTS: Ninety-eight patients (56 women, with a mean age of 62.2 years; 42 men, with a mean age of 39.8 years) with 111 paralyzed vocal folds. The causes were varied, with thyroid surgery (53 cases) and idiopathic palsy (18 cases) being the predominant factors. INTERVENTION: Prognostication was based on electromyography performed no earlier than 14 days after onset of palsy. Findings were classified as neurapraxy, axonotmesis, and neurotmesis. Prognosis is inherent in this classification, since neurapraxy is presumed to resolve completely within 8 to 12 weeks, whereas axonotmesis is most likely to be followed by impaired vocal fold mobility. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Vocal fold mobility after 6 months. RESULTS: In 102 vocal folds, some palsy of various degree persisted after 6 months. Free mobility of the paralyzed vocal fold was restored in 9 cases. By means of laryngeal electromyography, defective recovery, defined as absence of completely free vocal fold mobility, was predicted correctly in 94.4% of cases (68/72). For complete recovery, prognosis was accurate in only 12.8% of cases (5/39). CONCLUSIONS: The detection of neural degeneration by laryngeal electromyography allows the prediction of poor functional outcome with sufficient reliability in an early phase of the disease process. Conversely, the absence of signs of degeneration does not imply that complete recovery is to be expected.
Authors: Gerd Fabian Volk; Rudolf Hagen; Claus Pototschnig; Gerhard Friedrich; Tadeus Nawka; Christoph Arens; Andreas Mueller; Gerhard Foerster; Mira Finkensieper; Ruth Lang-Roth; Christian Sittel; Claudio Storck; Maria Grosheva; M Nasser Kotby; Carsten M Klingner; Orlando Guntinas-Lichius Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol Date: 2012-05-11 Impact factor: 2.503
Authors: Nikolay Sapundzhiev; György Lichtenberger; Hans Edmund Eckel; Gerhard Friedrich; Ivan Zenev; Robert J Toohill; Jochen Alfred Werner Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol Date: 2008-04-17 Impact factor: 2.503