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Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study

BACKGROUND: Voice change is one of the earliest features of Parkinson’s disease. However, quantitative studies of vocal fold dynamics which are needed to provide insight into disease biology, aid diagnosis, or track progression, are few. METHODS: We therefore quantified arytenoid cartilage movements...

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Autores principales: Perju-Dumbrava, Laura, Lau, Ken, Phyland, Debbie, Papanikolaou, Vicki, Finlay, Paul, Beare, Richard, Bardin, Philip, Stuckey, Stephen, Kempster, Peter, Thyagarajan, Dominic
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5669420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29099841
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186611
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author Perju-Dumbrava, Laura
Lau, Ken
Phyland, Debbie
Papanikolaou, Vicki
Finlay, Paul
Beare, Richard
Bardin, Philip
Stuckey, Stephen
Kempster, Peter
Thyagarajan, Dominic
author_facet Perju-Dumbrava, Laura
Lau, Ken
Phyland, Debbie
Papanikolaou, Vicki
Finlay, Paul
Beare, Richard
Bardin, Philip
Stuckey, Stephen
Kempster, Peter
Thyagarajan, Dominic
author_sort Perju-Dumbrava, Laura
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Voice change is one of the earliest features of Parkinson’s disease. However, quantitative studies of vocal fold dynamics which are needed to provide insight into disease biology, aid diagnosis, or track progression, are few. METHODS: We therefore quantified arytenoid cartilage movements and glottic area during repeated phonation in 15 patients with Parkinson’s disease (symptom duration < 6 years) and 19 controls, with 320-slice computerised tomography (CT). We related these measures to perceptual voice evaluations and spirometry. We hypothesised that Parkinson’s disease patients have a smaller inter-arytenoid distance, a preserved or larger glottic area because vocal cord bowing has previously been reported, less variability in loudness, more voice dysdiadochokinesis and breathiness and a shortened phonation time because of arytenoid hypokinesis relative to glottic area. RESULTS: Inter-arytenoid distance in Parkinson’s disease patients was moderately smaller (Mdn = 0.106, IQR = 0.091–0.116) than in controls (Mdn = 0.132, IQR = 0.116–0.166) (W = 212, P = 0.015, r = −0.42), normalised for anatomical and other inter-subject variance, analysed with two-tailed Wilcoxon’s rank sum test. This finding was confirmed in a linear mixed model analysis—Parkinson’s disease significantly predicted a reduction in the dependent variable, inter-arytenoid distance (b = −0.87, SEb = 0.39, 95% CI [−1.66, −0.08], t(31) = −2.24, P = 0.032). There was no difference in glottic area. On perceptual voice evaluation, patients had more breathiness and dysdiadochokinesis, a shorter maximum phonation time, and less variability in loudness than controls. There was no difference in spirometry after adjustment for smoking history. CONCLUSIONS: As predicted, vocal fold adduction movements are reduced in Parkinson’s disease on repeated phonation but glottic area is maintained. Some perceptual characteristics of Parkinsonian speech reflect these changes. We are the first to use 320-slice CT to study laryngeal motion. Our findings indicate how Parkinson’s disease affects intrinsic laryngeal muscle position and excursion.
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spelling pubmed-56694202017-11-17 Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study Perju-Dumbrava, Laura Lau, Ken Phyland, Debbie Papanikolaou, Vicki Finlay, Paul Beare, Richard Bardin, Philip Stuckey, Stephen Kempster, Peter Thyagarajan, Dominic PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Voice change is one of the earliest features of Parkinson’s disease. However, quantitative studies of vocal fold dynamics which are needed to provide insight into disease biology, aid diagnosis, or track progression, are few. METHODS: We therefore quantified arytenoid cartilage movements and glottic area during repeated phonation in 15 patients with Parkinson’s disease (symptom duration < 6 years) and 19 controls, with 320-slice computerised tomography (CT). We related these measures to perceptual voice evaluations and spirometry. We hypothesised that Parkinson’s disease patients have a smaller inter-arytenoid distance, a preserved or larger glottic area because vocal cord bowing has previously been reported, less variability in loudness, more voice dysdiadochokinesis and breathiness and a shortened phonation time because of arytenoid hypokinesis relative to glottic area. RESULTS: Inter-arytenoid distance in Parkinson’s disease patients was moderately smaller (Mdn = 0.106, IQR = 0.091–0.116) than in controls (Mdn = 0.132, IQR = 0.116–0.166) (W = 212, P = 0.015, r = −0.42), normalised for anatomical and other inter-subject variance, analysed with two-tailed Wilcoxon’s rank sum test. This finding was confirmed in a linear mixed model analysis—Parkinson’s disease significantly predicted a reduction in the dependent variable, inter-arytenoid distance (b = −0.87, SEb = 0.39, 95% CI [−1.66, −0.08], t(31) = −2.24, P = 0.032). There was no difference in glottic area. On perceptual voice evaluation, patients had more breathiness and dysdiadochokinesis, a shorter maximum phonation time, and less variability in loudness than controls. There was no difference in spirometry after adjustment for smoking history. CONCLUSIONS: As predicted, vocal fold adduction movements are reduced in Parkinson’s disease on repeated phonation but glottic area is maintained. Some perceptual characteristics of Parkinsonian speech reflect these changes. We are the first to use 320-slice CT to study laryngeal motion. Our findings indicate how Parkinson’s disease affects intrinsic laryngeal muscle position and excursion. Public Library of Science 2017-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC5669420/ /pubmed/29099841 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186611 Text en © 2017 Perju-Dumbrava et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Perju-Dumbrava, Laura
Lau, Ken
Phyland, Debbie
Papanikolaou, Vicki
Finlay, Paul
Beare, Richard
Bardin, Philip
Stuckey, Stephen
Kempster, Peter
Thyagarajan, Dominic
Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
title Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
title_full Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
title_fullStr Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
title_full_unstemmed Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
title_short Arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in Parkinson’s disease: A quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
title_sort arytenoid cartilage movements are hypokinetic in parkinson’s disease: a quantitative dynamic computerised tomographic study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5669420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29099841
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186611
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