A Comparison of Radiation-Induced and Presbylaryngeal Dysphonia

Author:

Behrman Alison12,Abramson Allan L.12,Myssiorek David12

Affiliation:

1. New Hyde Park, New York

2. Schein Voice and Laryngeal Center, Department of Otolaryngology and Communicative Disorders, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, a clinical campus of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to assess voice after radiotherapy compared with patients with presbylaryngeal dysphonia. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Prospective assessment of 20 patients aged 60+ years who remained free of disease longer than 1 year after radiotherapy for T1 squamous cell carcinoma and retrospective review of 46 patients aged 60+ with presbylaryngeal dysphonia, conducted at a tertiary care, academic hospital. Assessment data included videostroboscopy, spectrography, voice range profile, and Voice Handicap Index. RESULTS: Eighty percent of the radiotherapy patients reported a voice disorder. Acoustic data and functional measures reflected similar limitations and abnormalities for both groups. A high incidence of glottal gap in all patients may have been associated with increased mucosal stiffness in the radiotherapy group and vocal fold atrophy in the presbylaryngeal group. CONCLUSION: Patient perception and functional outcome of voice were similar for both groups, despite differences in etiology of abnormal vocal fold vibratory behavior. SIGNIFICANCE: Radiotherapy in older individuals may yield dysphonia that is no greater than that caused by normal aging.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

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