MedPath

Straw Phonation Exercise Program for Pitch Extension

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Voice Hoarseness
Voice Disorders
Voice Fatigue
Interventions
Behavioral: Straw phontion
Registration Number
NCT05357222
Lead Sponsor
University of Utah
Brief Summary

To investigate the change in fundamental frequency range and vocal fold stability achievable with vocal fold stretching exercise in human populations with high and low vocal activity

Detailed Description

The vocal ligament is part of the layered structure of the vocal fold. It is a thin band of tissue near the superior medial edge of the vocal fold. The cord-like appearance of the ligament gave rise to the traditional term "vocal cord". The ligament connects the arytenoid cartilage (lower broad dark region) to the anterior portion of the thyroid cartilage (upper dark region). The slightly thickened endpoints are known as the anterior and posterior macula flava. In the medial-lateral direction, the vocal ligament comprises the intermediate and deep layer of the lamina propria.

The physiological functions of the vocal ligament are not fully understood. One function is to limit mechanical strain (elongation), a general function of most ligaments in the body. A second function may be to produce a firm closure of the glottis by forming a straight edge along the membranous (vibrating) portion of the vocal fold. A strong ligament that can be tensed with exercise is likely to help straighten the edge of the folds. Vocal fold bowing, for example, is a pathological condition often associated with advanced age, but it can also occur in young adults who press their arytenoid cartilages together excessively in speech. Atrophy of the thyroarytenoid muscle, which lies lateral to the ligament, causes the middle of the membranous vocal fold to be retracted from the midline of the glottis. The result is a weak voice because airflow cannot be suddenly shut off for efficient acoustic excitation of the vocal tract. For self-sustained vocal fold vibration, the superficial layer must be very pliable and deformable for mucosal surface-wave motion. The role of the ligament is then to stabilize the vertical motion when large pressures are applied to vocal fold surfaces. The most important known function of the ligament, however, is to widen the fundamental frequency range. The stiffer the ligament, the greater the likelihood that several octaves of fo range can be achieved.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
120
Inclusion Criteria
  • Participants must be 18 years or older
  • no current voice disorder
  • no history of performance or professional vocal training
Exclusion Criteria
  • history of head/neck cancer, laryngeal surgery, current voice disorder requiring medical management
  • cognitive limitations that would prevent them from successfully and safely participating in the study.
  • history of gastrointestinal disease or surgery w
  • no known neurological or structural abnormalities of vocal folds
  • previous laryngeal surgeries;
  • allergies to local anesthetics (used to suppress a sensitive gag reflex during laryngeal endoscopic examination);
  • cardiac abnormalities;
  • recent history of smoking (must be completely smoke-free for six months prior to study commencement because of the effect of smoking on the voice and laryngopharyngeal reflux severity).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Straw PhonationStraw phontionParticipants will undergo one session of voice habilitation via a straw phonation exercise protocol. This protocol has been extensively studied and validated in the largest randomized clinical trial in voice therapy by our team.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Voice Range Profile (VRP)3 months following intervention

a thorough voice range profile will be created by testing the participants lowest (minimum) and highest (maximum) achievable pitches across a spectrum of vocal intensities (soft, medium and loud).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Electroglottography (EGG)3 months following treatment.

Electroglottograph, or EGG, is a device used for the noninvasive measurement of the degree of contact between the vibrating vocal folds during voice production. Electrodes are applied on the surface of the neck so that the EGG records variations in the transverse electrical impedance of the larynx can be measured.

Acoustic measurement3 months following treatment.

An audio recording of each participant will be obtained. The participant will sustain the "ah" and "ee" vowel three times for the maximum amount of time they are able. They will then read the CAPE-V (Zraick et al., 2011), rainbow passage (Fairbanks, 1960), and describe the cookie theft picture (Borod et al., Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination 1980). The samples will then be analyzed using Phonanium, an automated acoustic analysis software. Acoustics will include fundamental frequency, fundamental frequency standard deviation, relative sound pressure level (SPL), SPL standard deviation, cepstral peak prominence smooth (CPPS), harmonic to noise ratio, and noise to harmonic ratio, acoustic voice quality index (AVQI), and spectral slope.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Utah

🇺🇸

Salt Lake City, Utah, United States

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