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Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital ; 27(1): 22-6, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17601207

ABSTRACT

Dysphonia is a common paediatric condition. Adult voices are usually evaluated using a set of minimal basic measurements including: endoscopic examination, aerodynamics, perception, acoustics, and self-assessment by the patient. The Voice Handicap Index is the most widely used self-assessment tool, but its use in the paediatric setting has never been reported. Aim of this study was to report Voice Handicap Index ratings in a group of dysphonic children, multi-modally assessed before and after voice therapy. The study involved 28 children (16 female, 12 male, mean age 10.9 years (range 6-12)) presenting chronic hoarseness due to vocal fold nodules (18 cases), unilateral localised oedema (6 cases) or recurrent laryngeal paralysis (4 cases). All received voice therapy for 5-6 months, and underwent voice assessments based on video-endoscopy ratings (size of nodule/ oedema or glottic closure in the case of recurrent laryngeal paralysis), maximum phonation time, GIRBAS scale, spectrograms and a perturbation analysis. All patients also completed the Voice Handicap Index. Aerodynamic, acoustic, perceptual and self-assessment data, before and after voice therapy, were compared using Wilcoxon's test and Student's t test. Correlations between the Voice Handicap Index domains were measured by means of Pearson's correlation coefficient. Post-treatment measurements showed that the nodules/oedema had decreased in size in 18 children following therapy, and two subjects with recurrent laryngeal paralysis showed improved glottic closure. Mean maximum phonation time increased slightly, but the difference was not significant. There was a general reduction in perceptual severity, but this was only significant for parameters G, B and A. Spectrographic analysis showed no significant improvement and, although the mean perturbation analysis values improved, only the difference in jitter values was significant (p = 0.016). Voice Handicap Index was applicable in all cases, and showed a clear and significant improvement (p = 0.0006). The correlations between the three Voice Handicap Index factors were close; no correlation was found between the functional domain and the physical and emotional domains. The Voice Handicap Index is a useful tool in children with dysphonia, but an adapted version validated for paediatric patients is essential.


Subject(s)
Voice Disorders/diagnosis , Voice Disorders/epidemiology , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Severity of Illness Index
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