The Prevalence of Creak Across Breath Groups in Adductor Laryngeal Dystonia.

IF 2.5 4区 医学 Q1 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY Journal of Voice Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.1016/j.jvoice.2024.10.013
Katherine L Marks, Saul A Frankford, Sarah J Cocroft, Samantha Lonergan, Manuel E Díaz Cádiz, Cara E Stepp
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Abstract

Objective: Creak is an acoustic feature found to discriminate speakers with adductor laryngeal dystonia (AdLD) from typical speakers with outstanding diagnostic accuracy. Yet creak is also used by typical speakers as a phrase-boundary marker. This study aims to compare the prevalence of creak across estimated breath groups in speakers with AdLD and controls to delineate physiological mechanisms underlying creak in AdLD.

Methods: Thirty-four speakers read aloud the first paragraph of the Rainbow Passage (17 diagnosed with AdLD and 17 with no history of voice complaints). "Breath-like" pauses were defined as any in which technicians audibly heard a pause and all pauses >500 ms. For each phoneme, the time preceding the next breath-like pause was calculated, and the probability of creak occurrence was calculated. A generalized linear mixed-effects model was performed to determine the relationship between creak and time preceding a breath-like pause.

Results: Inter-rater and intrarater reliability of technicians were excellent. There was a statistically greater probability of creak in the AdLD group compared to controls (22% vs. 5%) and a statistically greater probability of creak as speakers approached a breath-like pause in both groups. The interaction between the time preceding a breath-like pause and group was significant, with a stronger relationship between the time preceding a breath-like pause and creak for control speakers (P < 0.001).

Conclusions: Creak is more prevalent in speakers with AdLD and may not only be related to respiratory phrasing but possibly in response to or because of the hyperadduction of the vocal folds during a laryngeal spasm.

Lay summary: The probability of creak occurring was greater towards the end of estimated breath groups in speakers with and without AdLD; however, for speakers with AdLD, creak was more prominent across the entire breath group.

Level of evidence: 3:

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喉内收肌张力障碍患者不同呼吸组吱吱声的发生率
目的:嘎吱声是一种声学特征,可将患有喉内收肌张力障碍(AdLD)的说话者与典型说话者区分开来,诊断准确性极高。然而,嘎吱声也被典型说话者用作短语边界标记。本研究旨在比较 AdLD 说话者和对照组说话者在估计呼吸组别中的嘎吱声发生率,以确定 AdLD 中嘎吱声的生理机制:方法:34 位说话者朗读了《彩虹通道》的第一段(17 位被诊断为 AdLD,17 位无嗓音不适史)。"类似呼吸 "的停顿被定义为技术人员能听到的任何停顿,以及所有大于 500 毫秒的停顿。对于每个音素,计算下一次类似呼吸的停顿之前的时间,并计算发生嘎吱声的概率。采用广义线性混合效应模型确定嘎吱声与类呼吸停顿前时间之间的关系:结果:技术人员的评分间可靠性和评分内可靠性都非常好。据统计,与对照组相比,AdLD 组出现吱吱声的概率更高(22% 对 5%),而且据统计,当说话者接近类似呼吸的停顿时,两组出现吱吱声的概率都更高。类呼吸停顿前的时间与组别之间的交互作用具有显著性,对照组说话者类呼吸停顿前的时间与吱吱声之间的关系更密切(P 结论:"类呼吸停顿前的时间与吱吱声之间的交互作用具有显著性":嘎吱声在患有 AdLD 的说话者中更为普遍,可能不仅与呼吸措辞有关,而且可能是喉痉挛时声带过度收缩的反应或原因:3:
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来源期刊
Journal of Voice
Journal of Voice 医学-耳鼻喉科学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
13.60%
发文量
395
审稿时长
59 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Voice is widely regarded as the world''s premiere journal for voice medicine and research. This peer-reviewed publication is listed in Index Medicus and is indexed by the Institute for Scientific Information. The journal contains articles written by experts throughout the world on all topics in voice sciences, voice medicine and surgery, and speech-language pathologists'' management of voice-related problems. The journal includes clinical articles, clinical research, and laboratory research. Members of the Foundation receive the journal as a benefit of membership.
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