Laryngeal Aerodynamics in Healthy Older Adults and Adults With Parkinson's Disease

Author:

Matheron Deborah12,Stathopoulos Elaine T.1,Huber Jessica E.3,Sussman Joan E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences, SUNY University at Buffalo, NY

2. Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences, SUNY College at Cortland, NY

3. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

Abstract

Purpose The present study compared laryngeal aerodynamic function of healthy older adults (HOA) to adults with Parkinson's disease (PD) while speaking at a comfortable and increased vocal intensity. Method Laryngeal aerodynamic measures (subglottal pressure, peak-to-peak flow, minimum flow, and open quotient [OQ]) were compared between HOAs and individuals with PD who had a diagnosis of hypophonia. Increased vocal intensity was elicited via monaurally presented multitalker background noise. Results At a comfortable speaking intensity, HOAs and individuals with PD produced comparable vocal intensity, rates of vocal fold closure, and minimum flow. HOAs used smaller OQs, higher subglottal pressure, and lower peak-to-peak flow than individuals with PD. Both groups increased speaking intensity when speaking in noise to the same degree. However, HOAs produced increased intensity with greater driving pressure, faster vocal fold closure rates, and smaller OQs than individuals with PD. Conclusions Monaural background noise elicited equivalent vocal intensity increases in HOAs and individuals with PD. Although both groups used laryngeal mechanisms as expected to increase sound pressure level, they used these mechanisms to different degrees. The HOAs appeared to have better control of the laryngeal mechanism to make changes to their vocal intensity.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference88 articles.

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2. Can the Lombard effect be used to improve low voice intensity in Parkinson's disease?

3. Effects of multitalker noise on conversational speech intensity in Parkinson's disease;Adams S.;Journal of Medical Speech-Language Pathology,2006

4. Toward the development of an objective index of dysphonia severity: A four‐factor acoustic model

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