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The Significant Influence of Hoarseness Levels in Connected Speech on the Voice-Related Disability Evaluated Using Voice Handicap Index-10

Authors :
Hidenori Inohara
Kiyohito Hosokawa
Masanori Umatani
Daichi Yoshida
Makoto Ogawa
Itsuki Kitayama
Naoki Matsushiro
Shinobu Iwaki
Mio Iwahashi
Toshihiko Iwahashi
Chieri Kato
Misao Yoshida
Source :
Journal of Voice. 37:290.e7-290.e16
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Summary Objectives This retrospective study examines the influence of voice quality in connected speech (CS) and sustained vowels (SV) on the voice-related disability in patients’ daily living documented by Voice Handicap Index-10 (VHI-10). Methods A total of 500 voice recordings of CS and SV samples from 338 patients with voice disturbances were included, along with the patients' age, diagnoses, maximum phonation time, and VHI-10. Dataset-1 comprised of 338 untreated patients, whereas Dataset-2 included 162 patients before and after phonosurgeries. As a preliminary study, the concurrent and diagnostic validities based on auditory-perceptual judgments were examined for cepstral peak prominence (CPP) and CPP smoothed (CPPS) for CS and SV tasks. Next, simple correlations and multivariate regression analyses (MRA) were performed to identify which of the acoustic measures for the CS or SV tasks significantly influenced the total score or improvement of VHI-10. Results The preliminary study confirmed high correlations with hoarseness levels as well as the excellent diagnostic accuracy of CPP and CPPS for both CS and SV tasks. In Dataset-1, the simple correlations and MRA results showed that cepstral measures in both tasks demonstrated moderate correlations with, and significant contribution to the total score of VHI-10, respectively. However, in Dataset-2, the changes of cepstral measures, as well as the median pitch after phonosurgeries in the CS tasks only, showed significant contributions to the improvement of VHI-10. Conclusion The study demonstrated that the hoarseness levels in both the CS and SV tasks equivalently influenced the VHI-10 scores, and that the post-surgical change of voice quality only in the CS tasks influenced the improvement of voice-related disability in daily living.

Details

ISSN :
08921997
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Voice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ca8e7ba8a8a1cd4394746df98859990
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvoice.2020.11.024