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Voice Disorders in Medically Complex Children

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Buccal speech. Phonation on inspiration. Ventricular phonation ... Oral communicator using buccal speech. JF. Communication options discussed. Immediate therapy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Voice Disorders in Medically Complex Children


1
Voice Disorders in Medically Complex Children
  • Roger C. Nuss, MD, FACS
  • Geralyn Harvey Woodnorth, M.A., CCC-SLP
  • Department of Otolaryngology and Communication
    Enhancement
  • Childrens Hospital Boston
  • Harvard Medical School

2
The Medically Complex Child
  • Can at first be a bit overwhelming
  • Underlying medical problems may have similar
    effects on larynx and ability to phonate

3
Themes in medically complex child
  • Laryngeal / vocal fold scarring
  • Vocal fold immobility

4
Themes in medically complex child
  • Compensatory techniques, vocal hyperfunction are
    common
  • Overall weakness / debilitation may limit
    respiratory support
  • Compromise of airway may limit ultimate vocal
    outcomes

5
Case Example
  • Teenager with
  • Dev. Delay
  • Hypotonia
  • Subglottic stenosis
  • Prior LTR
  • Replacement of trach
  • Cricoarytenoid fixation

6
What range of medical issues are seen in the
complex patient ?
  • Usually combination of problems related to
  • Prematurity
  • Complex congenital heart disease
  • Genetic disorder
  • Autoimmune disease
  • Iatrogenic

7
Congenital Laryngeal Disease
  • Laryngeal web
  • Laryngeal stenosis
  • Laryngeal cleft

8
Complex Congenital Heart Disease
  • Tetralogy of Fallot
  • Right sided arch
  • Double arch
  • Single ventricle

9
Pulmonary Disease
  • Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
  • Chronic lung disease of prematurity
  • Congenital lobar emphysema
  • Restrictive lung disease
  • Asthma

10
Case Example
  • School age boy with
  • Asthma
  • Obesity
  • Severe OSA
  • GERD
  • Polypoid corditis

11
Cystic fibrosis
  • Pulmozyme related vocal fold polyposis
  • Poor pulmonary reserve, breath support
  • Hemoptysis

12
Vocal Fold Palsy / Paresis
  • Idiopathic - congenital
  • Neurologic
  • Chiari malformation
  • Hydrocephalus
  • CNS injury
  • Stroke

13
Vocal Fold Immobility - Iatrogenic
  • Cardiac surgery
  • PDA ligation
  • TOF repair
  • VSD repair
  • Tracheo-esophageal fistula repair
  • Vagal nerve stimulator

14
Cricoarytenoid ankylosis
  • Prolonged intubation
  • Prolonged immobility ? fixation

15
Autoimmune related disease
  • Crohns disease
  • Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
  • Wegeners disease

16
Case Example Lipoid Proteinosis
  • Teenager with longstanding coarse low pitched
    voice quality
  • Poor intelligibility on telephone
  • No OSA

17
How do Complex Medical Problems affect the Voice ?
  • Pulmonary reserve
  • Breath support
  • Incompetent glottis
  • Inability to adduct vocal folds
  • Decreased phonation time
  • Supraglottic compensation / hyperfunction

18
How do Complex Medical Problems affect the Voice ?
  • Inflammatory changes of glottis
  • GERD / LPR

19
How do Complex Medical Problems affect the Voice ?
  • Scarring of glottis
  • Prior surgery
  • Recurrent procedures for laryngeal papillomas

20
What are reasonable surgical interventions ?
  • Improve the Airway
  • Subglottal stenosis repair
  • Repair glottic web
  • Management of RRP
  • Hemangioma management
  • Vascular malformations of larynx

21
Surgical Interventions
  • Improve glottal closure
  • Reduce risk of aspiration
  • Improve subglottal pressure
  • Improve vocal fold mucosal wave entrapment
  • Techniques
  • Laryngeal framework surgery
  • Injection medialization

22
Injection Medialization Laryngoplasty
23
Surgical Interventions
  • Improve vocal fold surfaces
  • Prevention
  • Treatment of scarring
  • Vibratory characteristics

24
Medical Interventions
  • Control of asthma
  • Recognition treatment of GERD
  • Allergy management
  • Autoimmune diseases

25
Why does surgery alone not correct the voice
disturbance ?
  • A childs internal set point for their vocal
    output may not be the desired goal.
  • Children with congenital laryngeal pathology may
    never had produced a normal voice
  • Vocal compensatory techniques may need to be
    unlearned

26
Effective voice treatment with medically complex
children requires a team approach
  • SLP
  • ORL
  • Related disciplines
  • Pulmonary
  • GI
  • Cardiology
  • Etc.

27
Voice Evaluation
  • History
  • Hearing
  • Medical evaluation
  • Laryngeal structure and function
  • Instrumental measurements
  • Acoustic
  • Aerodynamic
  • Videostroboscopy
  • Speech mechanism
  • Respiration
  • Phonation
  • Resonance
  • Articulation
  • Perceptual evaluation
  • CAPE-V
  • Quality of life index
  • Parent/child perspective

28
CAPE V MI MO SE SCORE     Overall
C I /100 Severity Roughness
C I /100 Breathiness C I
/100 Strain C I
/100   Pitch C I
/100   Loudness C I /100
29
Recurring findings around voice disorders in
medically complex children
30
Primary findings.
  • Vocal hyperfunction
  • Incomplete glottic closure
  • Dyscoordination respiration/phonation

31
Post Surgery
  • Surgery by itself is not a fix for longstanding
    voice difficulties

32
Post Surgery
  • Residual limitations
  • Improved capacity yet insignificant adaptation
  • Learned behavior is retained,
  • muscle memory

33
Behavioral Voice Treatment
  • Education and support
  • Eliminate maladaptive behaviors
  • Coordination respiration/phonation
  • Vocal improvement
  • Environmental enhancements

34
Compensatory Behaviors
  • Eliminate maladaptive behaviors
  • Buccal speech
  • Phonation on inspiration
  • Ventricular phonation
  • Non-compulsory vs necessary compensation

35
Respiration
  • Coordination respiration / phonation
  • Phonation on exhalation
  • Replenishing breaths
  • Phrasing

36
Voice Enhancement
  • Improved quality
  • Reduce vocal hyperfunction as possible
  • Optimum, most efficient vocal function
  • Increased vocal range and flexibility

37
Voice Therapy Techniques
  • Chant talk, singing
  • Chewing
  • Forward focus/resonant voice therapy
  • Lip, tongue trills
  • Humming, nasal consonants
  • Kazoo-like productions
  • Phonation on inhalation
  • Vocal function exercises
  • Sustained, smooth production of vowels
  • Pitch glides
  • Yawn-Sigh

38
Comfortable Therapy Environment
  • Exploration
  • Try new things
  • Follow the leader
  • Encouragement / Support
  • Gradually shape improved production

39
Feedback
  • Specific feedback
  • Describe what you feel / hear
  • Visual and/or auditory feedback

40
Goal Directed Voice Therapy
  • Identify / define target voice
  • Establish goals across task hierarchy
  • Train self-evaluation
  • Plan for generalization
  • Goals for increased vocal range and flexibility

41
ConsiderationPrinciples of Motor Learning
  • High number responses
  • Intense repetitive practice
  • Move from blocked training to randomized trials
  • Progress through a hierarchy
  • Give specific feedback
  • Build in success

42
Treatment A Dynamic Process
  • Target voice may change over time
  • Surgery
  • Refinement of best voice
  • Maturity

43
Environment Enhancement
  • Accommodations
  • Amplification
  • Positioning / Seating
  • Control environmental noise

44
EG
  • History of L-transposition of the great arteries,
    status post double switch procedure at 18 years
    of age
  • Weak breathy strained voice quality after
    surgery
  • Left vocal fold palsy - wide paramedian position.

45
EG
  • Voice pre-surgery
  • CAPE-V
  • Overall 56
  • MPT 9 seconds
  • Voice post-surgery
  • CAPE-V
  • Overall 15
  • MPT 18 seconds

46
EG
  • Aerodynamic measurements post surgery
  • Mean airflow .16 lit/sec (lt.20)
  • Mean peak air pressure 7.54 cm H20 (4-8)
  • Aerodynamic Resistance 45 (31-45)

47
DW
  • Former 28 week preemie
  • Left vocal fold palsy dx at 11 years
  • Suspect longstanding hyperfunction observed 7
    years before
  • Weak, breathy voice quality
  • Vocal hyperfunction

48
DW
  • Left vocal fold fat injection medialization
  • Pre-post perceptual and acoustic measures
    essentially unchanged
  • Voice therapy undertaken

49
CASE ZR
  • History of tracheoesophageal fistula, repaired as
    a newborn infant.
  • Status post prior LTR, anterior graft
  • Bilateral VF immobility, only limited movement R
    arytenoid
  • Complete glottic closure and a fairly good voice
    quality for a brief duration
  • One month post decannulation

50
CASE ZR
  • Sustained /a/
  • Speech

51
JF
  • Prematurity 24 weeks
  • Subglottic stenosis
  • Tracheostomy at 81 days
  • s/p LTR, anterior and posterior grafts
  • s/p cordotomy R TVC
  • Long term plan for decannulation

52
JF
  • Oral communicator using buccal speech

53
JF
  • Communication options discussed
  • Immediate therapy
  • Reduce excessive strain
  • lip synch
  • Progressed well with artificial larynx training
    and articulation therapy

54
JF
  • Decannulation accomplished
  • Initially aphonic
  • continued with artificial larynx
  • Gradually established functional voice

55
GC
  • Congenital glottic and subglottic stenosis
  • Status post LTR
  • ADHD

56
GC
  • Before voice therapy
  • CAPE-V Overall Rating 72
  • Low pitched, harsh voice
  • Variable loudness
  • Visible neck tension
  • After short course of therapy
  • CAPE-V 53
  • Reduced jitter
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