Ebersole Barbara, Soni Resha S, Moran Kathleen, Lango Miriam, Devarajan Karthik, Jamal Nausheen
Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Department of Speech Pathology, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Temple Head and Neck Institute, Temple University Health System, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Voice. 2018 Nov;32(6):673-680. doi: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2017.08.028. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
This study aimed to examine the relationships among patient occupation, laryngeal diagnosis, perceptual dysphonia severity, and patient-perceived voice impairment.
Adult patients presenting with a chief complaint of dysphonia over a 20-month period at a tertiary care, interdisciplinary voice center were included in this retrospective cohort study. Patients were categorized by profession: vocal performers, high occupational voice demand, low or no occupational voice demand, and retired. Associations between professional voice demand and clinician rating of dysphonia severity using the "Grade" score from the Grade, Roughness, Breathiness, Asthenia, and Strain scale and patient ratings of voice impairment using the Voice Handicap Index-10 (VHI-10) were tested using standard descriptive statistical methods.
One hundred and sixty-three patients with a presenting complaint of dysphonia were evaluated. Significant associations were found on univariate and multivariable analysis among a patient's occupational voice demand, Grade, Roughness, Breathiness, Asthenia, and Strain grade, and VHI-10 score (P = 0.007 and P < 0.001, respectively). Patients subject to greater vocal demands as a result of their occupation had a greater perception of impairment, regardless of acoustic-perceptual severity, when compared with those with low or no occupational voice demand. Although voice diagnosis was significantly associated with VHI-10 score on univariate analysis, it failed to reach significance on multivariable analysis. Demographic measures such as gender and age also did not correlate with perceived vocal impairment.
Patient-perception of voice impairment is influenced by occupational demand, independent of acoustic-perceptual dysphonia. Performers and people with high occupational voice needs demonstrate a unique sensitivity to subtle voice changes.
本研究旨在探讨患者职业、喉部诊断、嗓音障碍感知严重程度和患者自我感知的嗓音损伤之间的关系。
本回顾性队列研究纳入了在一家三级医疗跨学科嗓音中心就诊20个月期间以嗓音障碍为主诉的成年患者。患者按职业分类:声乐表演者、高职业嗓音需求者、低或无职业嗓音需求者以及退休人员。使用标准描述性统计方法检验职业嗓音需求与使用等级、粗糙度、气息声、无力感和紧张度量表中的“等级”评分对嗓音障碍严重程度的临床评估以及使用嗓音障碍指数-10(VHI-10)对嗓音损伤的患者评分之间的关联。
对163例以嗓音障碍为主诉的患者进行了评估。在单变量和多变量分析中发现,患者的职业嗓音需求、等级、粗糙度、气息声、无力感和紧张度等级与VHI-10评分之间存在显著关联(分别为P = 0.007和P < 0.001)。与低或无职业嗓音需求的患者相比,因职业而面临更大嗓音需求的患者,无论听觉-感知严重程度如何,对损伤的感知都更强。虽然在单变量分析中嗓音诊断与VHI-10评分显著相关,但在多变量分析中未达到显著水平。性别和年龄等人口统计学指标也与感知到的嗓音损伤无关。
患者对嗓音损伤的感知受职业需求影响,独立于听觉-感知性嗓音障碍。表演者和高职业嗓音需求者对细微的嗓音变化表现出独特的敏感性。