51. Voice Telerehabilitation in Iatrogenic Unilateral Vocal Fold Paralysis: From Necessity to Opportunity in the COVID-19 Time.
- Author
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Mari G, Marchese MR, Longobardi Y, Proietti I, Marenda ME, Di Cesare T, and D'Alatri L
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Adult, Time Factors, Aged, Laryngoscopy, Vocal Cords physiopathology, Vocal Cords surgery, Stroboscopy, Phonation, COVID-19 complications, Vocal Cord Paralysis rehabilitation, Vocal Cord Paralysis physiopathology, Vocal Cord Paralysis surgery, Vocal Cord Paralysis etiology, Voice Quality, Dysphonia physiopathology, Dysphonia rehabilitation, Dysphonia etiology, Dysphonia surgery, Dysphonia diagnosis, Recovery of Function, Telerehabilitation, Voice Training, Iatrogenic Disease, Thyroidectomy adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate results of telerehabilitation (TR) during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic for the treatment of dysphonia caused by permanent post-thyroidectomy unilateral vocal fold paralysis (UVFP)., Methods: Forty subjects with post-thyroidectomy UVFP (onset <1 month) underwent TR. Videostrobolaryngoscopy, acoustic and perceptual voice analysis and patient self-assessment were carried out in person before, at the end of TR and 6 months later., Results: Twenty-five subjects spontaneously recovered full vocal fold motility at some time during follow-up, whereas 15 had a permanent UVFP at the end of the follow-up period. These subjects constituted our study group. At the early posttherapy control 10/15 subjects (66.6%) showed a complete glottal closure, while in 5/15 (33.3%) a glottal gap remained (P = 0.03). These results did not change 6 months after TR. At the late posttherapy control the maximum phonation time improved significantly (P = 0.02). Both post-therapy Voice Handicap Index scores were significantly lower than the pre-therapy ones (P = 0.04). Grade, Breathiness, and Asthenia parameters of the Grade-Roughness-Breathiness-Asthenia-Strain scale improved 6 months after TR (P < 0.05). The number of voice signals suitable for acoustic analysis increased significantly after therapy. Finally, 87% of patients were satisfied with TR., Conclusions: With careful patient selection, TR may be considered as a promising method for voice therapy in postthyroidectomy UVFP., (Copyright © 2022 The Voice Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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