Sense of Effort and Fatigue Associated With Talking After Total Laryngectomy

Author:

Searl Jeff1,Knollhoff Stephanie1

Affiliation:

1. University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City

Abstract

Purpose Sense of effort and fatigue associated with talking was compared in individuals with and without a total laryngectomy. Method An online survey of individuals using tracheoesophageal speech (TES; n = 222), electrolaryngeal speech (ELS; n = 132), esophageal speech ( n = 41), and laryngeal speech (LS; n = 112) asked about 3 domains of effort when talking: frequency of occurrence, withdrawal from talking, and location in the body. Three aspects of fatigue were explored: frequency of occurrence, fatigue type, and duration of talking before fatigue. Results Alaryngeal groups reported significantly more talking-related effort and fatigue than the LS group. Sixty-three percent of all respondents indicated that effort caused them to talk less, with no group differences on this item. Significantly more effort was localized to the lips and tongue by ELS compared with TES and LS groups. Both the ELS and TES groups had higher shoulder/arm effort when talking compared with the esophageal speech and LS groups. ELS respondents reported less fatigue than the TES group. When fatigue was present, the TES group had more physical and less mental fatigue than the ELS group. The duration of talking before experiencing fatigue was significantly shorter for the alaryngeal groups compared with the LS group. Conclusions Effort and fatigue associated with talking are a common report for individuals using alaryngeal speech. The location of effort within the body and the type of fatigue experienced vary to some extent across alaryngeal speaking methods.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Otorhinolaryngology

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1. Promotion of Communication Access, Choice, and Agency for Autistic Students;Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools;2023-01-17

2. Surface Electromyography–Based Recognition, Synthesis, and Perception of Prosodic Subvocal Speech;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;2021-06-18

3. Predicting Communicative Participation in Adults Across Communication Disorders;American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology;2021-06-18

4. Do We Need a Measure of Vocal Effort? Clinician's Report of Vocal Effort in Voice Patients;Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups;2021-02-23

5. Listener impressions of alaryngeal communication modalities;International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology;2021-01-27

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