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Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds
The purpose of this study was to measure the clinical profile of patients with sulcus who had concomitant benign lesions such as polyp, oedema, cyst, nodules, or fibrous mass of the vocal fold. We reviewed the medical charts of 38 patients who had a diagnosis of sulcus type 2 or 3 (according to Ford...
Autores principales: | , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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Pacini Editore Srl
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7586191/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33100337 http://dx.doi.org/10.14639/0392-100X-N0555 |
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author | Miaśkiewicz, Beata Panasiewicz, Aleksandra Gos, Elżbieta Szkiełkowska, Agata Skarżyński, Piotr H. Włodarczyk, Elżbieta |
author_facet | Miaśkiewicz, Beata Panasiewicz, Aleksandra Gos, Elżbieta Szkiełkowska, Agata Skarżyński, Piotr H. Włodarczyk, Elżbieta |
author_sort | Miaśkiewicz, Beata |
collection | PubMed |
description | The purpose of this study was to measure the clinical profile of patients with sulcus who had concomitant benign lesions such as polyp, oedema, cyst, nodules, or fibrous mass of the vocal fold. We reviewed the medical charts of 38 patients who had a diagnosis of sulcus type 2 or 3 (according to Ford). The patients were classified into two groups. The study group consisted of 16 subjects who had sulcus and associated benign lesion; 22 patients diagnosed with sulcus alone were enrolled in a control group. We analysed psychosocial (Voice Handicap Index-30), auditory-perceptual (GRBAS), acoustic measures and videostroboscopic images. In the study group, the mean VHI-30 scores of all subscales ranged from moderate to severe handicap. The difference between groups was significant on the emotional (p = 0.004) and physical (p = 0.007) subscales. On GRBAS scale, the majority of patients from both groups exhibited mild hoarseness, breathiness, asthenic or strained voice, although roughness was more frequently rated moderate; the differences between groups were not statistically significant. The most abnormally increased values were achieved for amplitude values of acoustic parameters, but significant difference between groups was found in Soft Phonation Index only (p = 0.049). Concerning glottal closure, the most frequent finding was irregular chink in the study group, and spindle glottic chink in controls; we found significant differences between groups (p = 0.004). In both series of patients, the most frequent abnormal findings were moderately diminished amplitude and moderately restricted mucosal wave, with no significant difference between groups. Patients with sulcus and coexisting benign lesions were more handicapped on the emotional and physical subscales of VHI-30. The most characteristic shape of the glottal gap was irregular chink in the study group, and spindle chink in the control group. Acoustic evaluation of voice showed that the most severe disturbances affected amplitude parameters. The clinical characteristics indicated that the presence of sulcus primarily determines the quality of voice, and that additional benign pathologies do not drastically affect further voice deterioration. The coexistence of secondary benign vocal fold lesions aggravates the difficulties in making a preoperative diagnosis of sulcus. It is important to clinically suspect the possibility of coexistent sulcus to plan the correct treatment and obtain better voice outcomes. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7586191 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Pacini Editore Srl |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-75861912020-10-28 Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds Miaśkiewicz, Beata Panasiewicz, Aleksandra Gos, Elżbieta Szkiełkowska, Agata Skarżyński, Piotr H. Włodarczyk, Elżbieta Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital Laryngology The purpose of this study was to measure the clinical profile of patients with sulcus who had concomitant benign lesions such as polyp, oedema, cyst, nodules, or fibrous mass of the vocal fold. We reviewed the medical charts of 38 patients who had a diagnosis of sulcus type 2 or 3 (according to Ford). The patients were classified into two groups. The study group consisted of 16 subjects who had sulcus and associated benign lesion; 22 patients diagnosed with sulcus alone were enrolled in a control group. We analysed psychosocial (Voice Handicap Index-30), auditory-perceptual (GRBAS), acoustic measures and videostroboscopic images. In the study group, the mean VHI-30 scores of all subscales ranged from moderate to severe handicap. The difference between groups was significant on the emotional (p = 0.004) and physical (p = 0.007) subscales. On GRBAS scale, the majority of patients from both groups exhibited mild hoarseness, breathiness, asthenic or strained voice, although roughness was more frequently rated moderate; the differences between groups were not statistically significant. The most abnormally increased values were achieved for amplitude values of acoustic parameters, but significant difference between groups was found in Soft Phonation Index only (p = 0.049). Concerning glottal closure, the most frequent finding was irregular chink in the study group, and spindle glottic chink in controls; we found significant differences between groups (p = 0.004). In both series of patients, the most frequent abnormal findings were moderately diminished amplitude and moderately restricted mucosal wave, with no significant difference between groups. Patients with sulcus and coexisting benign lesions were more handicapped on the emotional and physical subscales of VHI-30. The most characteristic shape of the glottal gap was irregular chink in the study group, and spindle chink in the control group. Acoustic evaluation of voice showed that the most severe disturbances affected amplitude parameters. The clinical characteristics indicated that the presence of sulcus primarily determines the quality of voice, and that additional benign pathologies do not drastically affect further voice deterioration. The coexistence of secondary benign vocal fold lesions aggravates the difficulties in making a preoperative diagnosis of sulcus. It is important to clinically suspect the possibility of coexistent sulcus to plan the correct treatment and obtain better voice outcomes. Pacini Editore Srl 2020-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7586191/ /pubmed/33100337 http://dx.doi.org/10.14639/0392-100X-N0555 Text en Società Italiana di Otorinolaringoiatria e Chirurgia Cervico-Facciale, Rome, Italy https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.en This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the CC-BY-NC-ND (Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International) license. The article can be used by giving appropriate credit and mentioning the license, but only for non-commercial purposes and only in the original version. For further information: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.en |
spellingShingle | Laryngology Miaśkiewicz, Beata Panasiewicz, Aleksandra Gos, Elżbieta Szkiełkowska, Agata Skarżyński, Piotr H. Włodarczyk, Elżbieta Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
title | Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
title_full | Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
title_fullStr | Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
title_full_unstemmed | Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
title_short | Voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
title_sort | voice aspects in sulcus coexisting with benign lesions of the vocal folds |
topic | Laryngology |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7586191/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33100337 http://dx.doi.org/10.14639/0392-100X-N0555 |
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