Titre du document

Vocal quality of patients treated for laryngeal tuberculosis, before and after speech therapy

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Nom du corpus

Ortho

Auteur(s)
  • A C Nunes Ruas 1
  • V Cavalcanti Rolla 2
  • M H de Araújo-Melo 3
  • J Soares Moreira 1
  • C M Valete-Rosalino 1
Affiliation(s)
  • Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Evandro Chagas Clinical Research Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • Tuberculosis Reference Center, Evandro Chagas Clinical Research Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • Evandro Chagas Clinical Research Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Langue(s) du document
Anglais
Revue

The Journal of Laryngology & Otology

Éditeur
Cambridge
Année de publication
2010
Type de publication
Journal
Type de document
Research-article
Résumé

AbstractObjectives: To evaluate dysphonia in patients treated for laryngeal tuberculosis, and to assess the effect of speech therapy on patients' vocal quality. Materials and methods: Seven of 23 patients with a confirmed diagnosis of laryngeal tuberculosis, treated at the Evandro Chagas Institute of Clinical Research, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, underwent speech therapy for six months. These seven patients were evaluated by videolaryngoscopy and vocal acoustic analysis, before, during and after a course of speech therapy. Results: The 23 patients with laryngeal tuberculosis comprised five women and 18 men, with ages ranging from 25 to 83 years (mean 41.3 years). Dysphonia was present in 91.3 per cent of these laryngeal tuberculosis patients, being present as the first symptom in 82.6 per cent. In laryngeal tuberculosis patients with dysphonia, laryngeal tuberculosis treatment resulted in dysphonia resolution in only 15.8 per cent. After speech therapy, dysphonia patients had better vocal quality, as demonstrated by statistical analysis of jitter, shimmer, fundamental frequency variability, maximum phonation time, and the ratio between maximum phonation time for voiceless and voiced fricative sounds. Conclusions: Following treatment of laryngeal tuberculosis, the incidence of dysphonia was very high. Speech therapy improved patients' vocal quality.

Mots-clés d'auteur
  • Tuberculosis
  • Larynx
  • Dysphonia
  • Speech Therapy
Catégories INIST
  • 1 - sciences appliquees, technologies et medecines ; 2 - sciences biologiques et medicales ; 3 - sciences medicales
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6.73
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1.3
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ortho-ang_0040
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