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Functional Dysphonia/ Muscle Tension Dysphonia (MTD)

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Title: Functional Dysphonia/ Muscle Tension Dysphonia (MTD)


1
Functional Dysphonia/Muscle Tension Dysphonia
(MTD)
2
Muscle Tension Dysphonia A Functional Voice
Disorder
  • What is a functional voice disorder?
  • Voice disorder in the absence of
    structural/neurological pathology
  • Pathology insufficient to explain the degree of
    dysphonia
  • Voice disorder based on abuse/misuse causally
    linked to anatomical abnormalities

3
Functional dysphonia vs. muscle tension dysphonia
4
Muscle Tension Dysphonia (MTD)
  • Presumed Etiology
  • Excess or dysregulated activity of the intrinsic
    and extrinsic laryngeal muscles
  • Possible Sources
  • Technical misuse of the vocal mechanism
  • Learned adaptations following upper respiratory
    infection
  • Compensation for underlying vocal fold pathology
  • ? laryngeal tone 2 to laryngopharyngeal reflux
  • Psychological/personality factors

5
Muscle Tension Dysphonia (MTD)
  • Key Features
  • Laryngeal/paralaryngeal hypertonicity
  • stiff larynx
  • Larynx in unnatural position high in neck
  • Laryngeal muscle cramping
  • No unique voice quality/glottic configuration
  • Pre-treatment MTD samples

6
Muscle Tension Dysphonia (MTD)
  • Some Trends
  • Occurs predominantly in women (90 )
  • May account for gt 10 of cases referred to
    multidisciplinary voice clinics
  • Often the most severely affected voices
    encountered
  • Commonly follows URI symptoms
  • Past history of voice problems (80)
  • Varies in response to treatment

Roy et al. (1997)
7
Recognizing Muscle Tension Dysphonia
  • Patient history
  • Auditory-perceptual Features
  • Laryngoscopic Features
  • Direct clinical examination
  • Manual assessment of laryngeal musculoskeletal
    tension
  • Primary or Diagnostic therapy

8
Patient History
  • Vocal symptoms
  • Can have a sudden onset
  • May have had periods of resolution
  • May have developed along with a URI
  • Symptoms suggestive of excess musculoskeletal
    tension
  • Laryngeal tenderness, soreness, pain, tightness,
    swellings which intensify with extended voice
    use
  • Pain radiates to one or both ears
  • Unilateral symptoms are more common
  • Vocal fatigue, increased effort
  • Restricted dynamic range

9
Patient History
  • Voice Use History
  • may not reveal patterns of excessive voice use
  • Psychosocial History
  • may reveal elevated stress
  • Stress may be coincident with history of vocal
    symptoms

10
Auditory Perceptual Features
  • Generally
  • Severity of voice quality disturbance typically
    consistent across a range of speech tasks
  • Signs are usually continuous and rarely
    intermittent (no islands of normal speech)
  • Typically shows no improvement with falsetto or
    singing

11
Auditory Perceptual Features
  • The most disordered voices produced with normal
    larynges
  • Wide range variety of voice qualities
  • Possible existence of 5 auditory-perceptual
    clusters
  • qualitatively distinct
  • within a cluster, voices vary from mild-severe

12
Auditory-perceptual Clusters
  • Cluster 1
  • Persistent glottal fry
  • Cluster 2
  • Sustained harsh, strained (tension)
  • Cluster 3
  • Diplophonia, intermittent pitch voice breaks
  • Cluster 4
  • Aphonia (continuous)
  • Cluster 5
  • Elevated pitch (falsetto) with without
    strain, aphonia

13
THOUGHT QUESTION
  • Why dont persons with MTD develop laryngeal
    pathologies?

14
Laryngoscopic Features
  • Dysregulated muscle activity myriad of
    glottic/supraglottic contraction patterns
  • Rammage Morrison (2001) suggest a distinct set
    of laryngoscopic patterns
  • Controversial

15
MTD Type 1 Laryngeal Isometric(/- benign
mucosal disease)
  • Principle feature posterior glottic chink
  • Presumed due to ? PCA activity
  • Suggested association with benign mucosal lesions

16
MTD Type 2a Supraglottic Lateral Compression
  • Lateral compression principally at the glottis
  • May be some ventricular compression
  • ? closed phase
  • ? vibratory amplitude

17
MTD Type 2b Supraglottic Lateral Compression
  • Ventricular folds are approximated

18
MTD Type 3 Anterior-posterior supraglottic
compression
  • ? distance between anterior and posterior glottis
  • Arytenoids pull toward epiglottis
  • Associated with Bogart-Bacall syndrome

19
MTD Type 4 Non-adducted hyperfunction(-
supraglottic compression)
  • Incomplete glottal closure with normal mobility

20
MTD Type 4 Non-adducted hyperfunction(
supraglottic compression)
  • Incomplete glottal closure with normal mobility
  • Concomitant compression of the ventricular folds

21
MTD Type 5 Bowed vocal folds
  • Spindle-shape glottis
  • Also associated with
  • aging (presbylaryngis or presbyphonia)
  • Neurologic conditions (Parkinsons Disease)

22
Note
  • Relation between auditory-perceptual judgments
    and laryngoscopic findings are not straightforward

23
Direct Clinical Assessment
  • Focal palpation of circumlaryngeal area to
    determine
  • Presence of tenderness and/or pain
  • Laryngeal Stiffness
  • Presence of nodularity or taut bands
  • Reduced mobility of the larynx
  • Extent of laryngeal elevation

24
Manual Assessment of Laryngeal Musculoskeletal
Tension
  • All patients with voice disorders, regardless
    of etiology should be tested for excess
    musculoskeletal tension, either as a primary or
    secondary cause of dysphonia (Aronson, 1990)

25
Manual Assessment of Laryngeal Musculoskeletal
Tension
  • Pressure is directed over the
  • Major horns of the hyoid bone
  • Superior border of the thyroid cartilage
  • Anterior border of sternocleidomastoid and into
    the suprahyoid muscles
  • Determine size of the thyrohyoid space
  • Digital pressure should be just enough to
  • blanche (lighten in color) your nail bed

26
From Aronson (1990)
27
From Roy et al. (1996)
28
Treatment Options
  • Facilitating techniques designed to elicit easy,
    relaxed phonation, phonation at optimal pitch,
    etc
  • General and focal relaxation
  • Broad spectrum treatments that focus on
    increasing support and efficiency of phonatory
    behavior
  • Manual Circumlaryngeal Techniques
  • Pharmacologic Intervention (topical lidocaine)

29
Manual circumlaryngeal techniques
  • Goals
  • Determine contribution of laryngeal/extralaryngeal
    hypertonicity
  • Assure proper diagnosis and selection of
    appropriate treatment
  • Avoid unnecessary medical or surgical management
  • Show Pre-Post Samples

30
Manual circumlaryngeal techniques
  • A group of techniques
  • a hands on approach
  • Clinician manually repositions, repostures or
    massages the laryngeal structure while
    eliciting voice
  • Use voice task with a hierarchy of difficulty
  • Exploit facilitating techniques

31
Manual circumlaryngeal techniques
  • May be used as
  • primary treatment technique for musculoskeletal
    tension dysphonia (MTD)
  • diagnostic therapy to evaluate degree of
    contribution of musculoskeletal tension to voice
    disorder

32
MCT Reposturing techniques
  • Compression in the A-P direction (push-back)
  • Impede laryngeal elevation (Pull down)
  • Medial compression and downward traction
    (Reposturing)
  • Goal Perturb the abnormal laryngeal posture and
    evaluate change in voice quality

33
Technique 1 Push Back Maneuver
  • Digital compression in the posterior direction
    within the region of the larynx
  • Vary height and pressure
  • Suprahyoid
  • Hyoid
  • Infrahyoid
  • T-H space
  • Thyroid notch

34
Technique 2 Pull Down Maneuver
  • Impede laryngeal elevation by applying downward
    traction over the superior border of the thyroid

35
Technique 3 Laryngeal Reposturing
  • Medial compression and downward traction
  • pressure directed over posterior aspect of
    thyroid cartilage (and within T-H space)
  • Often helpful with non-adducted hyperfunction

36
Circumlaryngeal massage (manual laryngeal
tension reduction)
  • What is it?
  • Circular motion over
  • Tips of major horns of the hyoid bone
  • Thyrohyoid space
  • Posterior border of the thyroid cartilage
  • Medial and lateral suprahyoid muscles

37
Circumlaryngeal massage (manual laryngeal
tension reduction)
  • What is it?
  • Locate sites of focal tenderness, nodularity and
    tautness
  • Progress from superficial to deep pressure
  • Vary pressure according to patient tolerance
  • Patient must vocalize concurrently
  • Progressively increase complexity of voice stimuli

38
Indications for improvement (single session)
  • Improved voice quality
  • Pain reduction/relief
  • Normalized laryngeal height and mobility
  • Reduced muscle nodularity

39
Factors affecting management of MTD using MCT
  • Patient based factors
  • Motivation
  • Duration and severity of dysphonia
  • Persisting psychological issues
  • Primary and secondary gain, litigation etc

40
Clinician based factors
  • Technical skill
  • Clinician-patient dynamic
  • Communicate expectations and confidence in
    procedure
  • Pt learns by doing (avoid discussion)
  • Brisk therapeutic pace
  • Engage pt in process
  • Confront pt when effort ?
  • Reinforce improvement
  • Expect successive approximations to a normal
    voice
  • Variety of facilitating techniques
  • Know when to abandon a technique or stick with it
  • Establish that patient is responsible for change
  • May employ negative practice

41
Manual Circumlaryngeal Techniques
  • Evidence for clinical utility of MCT in
  • Functional dysphonia (muscle tension dysphonia)
  • Roy et al. (1997) J Voice

42
Short and long term effects of MCT
  • N25
  • Some improvement following Tx (96)
  • Normal or only mildly dysphonic following Tx (64
    )
  • Deterioration of voice at follow up (25 )
  • Improvement of voice at follow up (17 )

43
Short and long term effects of MCT
  • What about relapse?
  • 68 report some evidence of recurrence of some
    dysphonic symptoms
  • Recurrence is partial rather than complete
  • Occurs within 3 mos. following initial treatment
  • Less than 4 days in duration, self limiting (i.e.
    resolves spontaneously)

44
Concomitant MTD Organic/Neurogenic Dysphonia
  • Elevated laryngeal musculoskeletal tension may
    co-occur in patients with documented laryngeal
    pathology
  • Why? Cause, Effect, Complication
  • MCT have diagnostic treatment utility with
    these populations

45
Manual Assessment of Laryngeal Musculoskeletal
Tension
  • All patients with voice disorders, regardless
    of etiology should be tested for excess
    musculoskeletal tension, either as a primary or
    secondary cause of dysphonia (Aronson, 1990)

46
Examples
Post-MCT
Pre-MCT
  • Polyp
  • CVA
  • Reinkes edema

47
MCT with BMD Patients
  • N18
  • Gender
  • 83 female
  • 17 male
  • Age
  • Mean 44.1 years
  • SD 13 years
  • Dysphonia Duration
  • Mean 2.27 years
  • SD 3.64 years
  • 4/18 bilateral nodules
  • 2/18 unilateral nodule
  • 2/18 unilateral polyp
  • 2/18 Reinkes edema
  • 5/18 TVF irregularities/edema/erythema
  • 1/18 ventricular cyst
  • 1/18 interarytenoid lesion
  • 1/18 post-intubation granuloma

(Tasko, et al. 1994)
48
(No Transcript)
49
Topical Lidocaine (J Voice (2000))
  • Use of topical lidocaine in the treatment of
    muscle tension dysphonia.Dworkin JP, Meleca RJ,
    Simpson ML, Garfield I.Department of
    Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Wayne
    State University School of Medicine, Detroit,
    Michigan 48201, USA. aa1544_at_wayne.eduThis
    investigation explored the potential usefulness
    of topical lidocaine in the treatment of muscle
    tension dysphonia. Three patients with this
    disorder, who were previously unresponsive to
    standard voice therapy, were treated with
    lidocaine. In each case, the outcome was prompt,
    clinically significant, and sustained.
    Persistently high-pitched and shrill vocal
    quality was converted to near normal voice
    patterns within 15 minutes after
    transcricothyroid membrane lidocaine injection.
    We suggest that this temporary and simple
    laryngeal and tracheal anesthetic technique may
    have helped to break the perverse cycle of
    hyperactive glottal and supraglottal muscle
    contractions evident in each of these patients
    during phonation efforts. We discuss the possible
    sensorimotor mechanism of action of this
    therapeutic technique.

50
Atypical Presentation (video)
51
Psychological/Personality factors MTD
  • Issues
  • State vs. Trait Factors
  • Psychological Factors in Disease
  • Cause, Effect or Catalyst

52
Psychological/Personality factors MTD
  • Empirical findings in a group with MTD
  • Neuroticism - ? emotional stability and ?
    reactivity
  • ? scores
  • Extraversion-sociability, dominance, energy and
    enthusiasm
  • ? scores
  • Psychoticism impulsivity/aggressiveness (high)
    vs. agreeable/conscientiousness (low)
  • Similar to normal controls

Roy et al. (2000)
53
Psychological/Personality factors associated with
MTD
  • Additionally,
  • Anxious
  • Somatization physical complaints
  • Stress reactive
  • Alienated
  • Unhappy

Roy et al. (1997)
54
MTD compared to Vocal Nodule Patients
  • Empirical findings in a group with vocal nodules
  • Neuroticism - ? emotional stability and ?
    reactivity
  • Mildly ? scores
  • Extraversion-sociability, dominance, energy and
    enthusiasm
  • ? scores
  • Psychoticism impulsivity/aggressiveness (high)
    vs. agreeable/conscientiousness (low)
  • ? scores

Roy et al. (2000)
55
Functional Dysphonia
  • When no structural abnormality exists,
    descriptive terms are often used which imply a
    psychological etiology. For example,
  • Psychogenic dysphonia
  • Conversion dysphonia
  • Hysterical dysphonia

56
What is hysterical conversion?
  • conversion of psychological stress into
    physical complaints
  • Psychiatric literature suggests it arises from
  • Bland emotional unconcern/effect
  • Numerous physical complaints
  • Denial of anxieties and fears

57
Is MTD a hysterical conversion?
  • This triad of features was not observed with
    patients with broad diagnosis of FD (MTD)
  • Patients are typically quite anxious and
    concerned about problem
  • Short answer No
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