Voice and Voice Disorders

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Presentation transcript:

Voice and Voice Disorders Basic Anatomy and Physiology Loudness disorders Pitch disorders Quality disorders Diagnosis and evaluation Treatment Voice & Voice Disorders

Basic Anatomy and Physiology Voice & Voice Disorders

Voice & Voice Disorders

Voice & Voice Disorders

Voice & Voice Disorders

Voice & Voice Disorders

Physiology Abduction (opening) Adduction (closing) Sub-glottal air pressure Adduction (closing) Vocal fold elasticity Bernouli effect Voice & Voice Disorders

Vocal Fold Vibration Males about 120 Hz Females about 200 Hz Children about 240 Hz Voice & Voice Disorders

Intensity of Voice 30 dB for soft speech 50 dB for normal speech 70 dB for loud speech 90 dB for shouting Voice & Voice Disorders

Normal Voice Quality Difficult to quantify because it is so subjective. Disorders of quality use subjective terms Voice & Voice Disorders

Disorders of Loudness Aphonia Spastic Dysphonia Chronic Weak Voice Excessive Loudness Voice & Voice Disorders

Disorders of pitch Habitual Pitch Levels Variations in Pitch Pitch Breaks Falsetto Other Pitch Disorders Voice & Voice Disorders

Habitual Pitch Levels Variability is normal between people Changes in pitch during puberty Causes of abnormal pitch “infantile” personalities Tension Transexuals Functional (e.g., voice of authority) Anabolic steroids Hearing loss Voice & Voice Disorders

Variations in pitch Monotone can be due to … Emotional conflicts (e.g., depression) Fatigue Hearing loss Habitual pitch near bottom or top of pitch range. Voice & Voice Disorders

Pitch breaks Occurs during puberty Rapid shift from high to low, or low to high pitch Voice & Voice Disorders

Falsetto Abnormally high pitch due to tightening of vocal folds. Causes include . . . Psychological problems Defense against pitch breaks Method of preventing hoarseness of harsh voice. Voice & Voice Disorders

Other pitch disorders Tremulous voice Diplophonia Voice & Voice Disorders

Quality Disorders Disorders of Resonance Disorders of Laryngeal Tone Voice & Voice Disorders

Disorders of Resonance Hypernasality ... excessive nasality Causes . . . Cleft palate Adenoids or tonsils removed Assimilation nasality Other Hyponasality (denasality) Nasal passages are closed off. Causes. . . Enlarged tonsils or adenoids URI Voice & Voice Disorders

Disorders of Laryngeal Tone Breathiness Harsh Voice Hoarse Voice Voice & Voice Disorders

Breathiness Excessive amount of airflow and lack of consistent vocal fold vibration Insert 12.9 video clip Causes . . . Weakness of vocal folds Contact ulcers, vocal nodules, vocal polyps Non-organic causes Voice & Voice Disorders

Harsh voice Often found in presence of “glottal fry” Unusually high degree of tension. Causes . . . Non-organic Having to speak in background noise Voice & Voice Disorders

Hoarse Voice Combination of breathy and harsh voice (cheerleader’s voice) Causes . . . vocal abuse Severe cold or laryngitis Early sign of organic pathology Voice & Voice Disorders

Diagnosis of Voice Disorder Medical Speech-Language Pathology Voice & Voice Disorders

Medical Physical exam includes laryngoscope Endoscope Video stroboscopy Voice & Voice Disorders

Speech-Language Pathologist Perceptual assessment Voice disorders are observed and tested by speech language pathologist. Normally a high quality recording is made. Voice & Voice Disorders

Treatment of Voice Disorder Medical Therapy Voice & Voice Disorders

Medical Physical removal of polyp or nodule Laryngectomy Removal of Vocal Folds Voice & Voice Disorders

Medical Voice & Voice Disorders

Speech therapy Relaxation techniques Adaptive behavior Artificial larynx (see video clip 12.10) esophageal speech Voice & Voice Disorders

Voice & Voice Disorders