| Literature DB >> 3352445 |
L L D'Antonio1, H R Muntz, M A Province, J L Marsh.
Abstract
It is reported frequently that individuals with palatal clefts have a high occurrence of laryngeal/voice symptoms. It has been speculated that vocal pathology in this population is the result of laryngeal compensation for abnormal velopharyngeal valving. This paper describes the prevalence of laryngeal/voice findings in a group of 85 patients referred for multimethod evaluation of velopharyngeal dysfunction. Forty-one percent of the patients had auditorily perceived voice symptoms and/or observable laryngeal abnormalities. Twenty-one percent of the patients had vocal fold nodules or thickened vocal folds. There was no clear relationship between laryngeal/voice findings and nasoendoscopic or aerodynamic assessments of velopharyngeal dysfunction. However, there was a significant relationship between laryngeal/voice findings and estimated subglottal pressure. Patients with laryngeal/voice findings (with or without nodules) had average estimated subglottal pressure values which were outside the normal range more often than patients without laryngeal/voice findings. These results suggest patients referred for assessment of velopharyngeal dysfunction should receive a comprehensive evaluation which includes screening laryngeal structure and function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3352445 DOI: 10.1288/00005537-198804000-00016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Laryngoscope ISSN: 0023-852X Impact factor: 3.325