1. Defining differences in patient characteristics between spasmodic dysphonia and laryngeal tremor
- Author
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Jennifer C. Starkweather, C. Gaelyn Garrett, Priyesh N. Patel, Simone C Gruber, Edmond K. Kabagambe, Jordan S Akins, David O. Francis, Matthew Keller, and Zaki A. Ahmed
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Movement disorders ,Cross-sectional study ,business.industry ,Logistic regression ,Spasmodic dysphonia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Internal medicine ,Chi-square test ,medicine ,Analysis of variance ,medicine.symptom ,Family history ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Chi-squared distribution ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To compare presenting characteristics of patients with adductor spasmodic dysphonia (ADSD), ADSD with laryngeal tremor (ADSD + LT), and laryngeal tremor without ADSD (LT). DESIGN Cross-sectional analysis. METHODS Patients treated for laryngeal movement disorders (1990-2016) were included. Analysis of variance and chi square tests measured differences in patient characteristics across the three disease groups. Using ADSD as the referent, multivariable logistic regression models were used to determine whether potential risk factors including patient demographics, family history, presence of potential inciting events prior to disease onset, and coprevalent movement disorders were associated with ADSD + LT or LT. RESULTS In all, 652 patients with ADSD (n = 377), ADSD + LT (n = 98), and LT (n = 177) were included. ADSD patients were significantly younger than those with ADSD + LT and LT (52.5 ± 13.4, 63.9 ± 11.3, and 69.3 ± 10.5 years, respectively; P
- Published
- 2018
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