TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-Time Voice Accumulation During Work, Leisure, and a Vocal Loading Task in Groups With Different Levels of Functional Voice Problems
AU - Whitling, Susanna
AU - Lyberg-Åhlander, Viveka
AU - Rydell, Roland
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Voice Foundation
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Objective The study aimed to examine the vocal behavior and self-assessed vocal health in women with varying everyday vocal load and functional voice problems, including patients with functional dysphonia, in three conditions: work, leisure, and a vocal loading task (VLT). Study Design This is a longitudinal controlled, clinical trial. Methods Fifty (n = 50) female subjects were tracked during 7 days’ voice accumulation accompanied by a voice health questionnaire, containing general assessments with visual analogue scale and specific voice health questions. Subjects were divided into four vocal subgroups according to everyday vocal load and functional vocal complaints. Accumulation time was divided into three conditions: a VLT, work, and leisure. The following behavioral parameters were measured: (1) relative phonation time (%), (2) phonatory sound pressure/voice level (dB sound pressure level), (3) ambient noise level (dB sound pressure level), and (4) phonatory fundamental frequency (Hz). Results Patients with functional dysphonia reported significantly higher specific voice problems across conditions and worse general voice problems during work and leisure than other groups. Women with high everyday vocal load and voice complaints showed higher phonation times and fundamental frequency during work than voice healthy controls. They also reported the highest incidence of general voice problems in the VLT. Conclusions Vocal loading relates to prolonged phonation time at high fundamental frequencies. Patients with functional dysphonia experience general and specific voice problems permanently, whereas women with everyday vocal load and voice complaints recover during leisure. This may explain why the latter group does not seek voice therapy.
AB - Objective The study aimed to examine the vocal behavior and self-assessed vocal health in women with varying everyday vocal load and functional voice problems, including patients with functional dysphonia, in three conditions: work, leisure, and a vocal loading task (VLT). Study Design This is a longitudinal controlled, clinical trial. Methods Fifty (n = 50) female subjects were tracked during 7 days’ voice accumulation accompanied by a voice health questionnaire, containing general assessments with visual analogue scale and specific voice health questions. Subjects were divided into four vocal subgroups according to everyday vocal load and functional vocal complaints. Accumulation time was divided into three conditions: a VLT, work, and leisure. The following behavioral parameters were measured: (1) relative phonation time (%), (2) phonatory sound pressure/voice level (dB sound pressure level), (3) ambient noise level (dB sound pressure level), and (4) phonatory fundamental frequency (Hz). Results Patients with functional dysphonia reported significantly higher specific voice problems across conditions and worse general voice problems during work and leisure than other groups. Women with high everyday vocal load and voice complaints showed higher phonation times and fundamental frequency during work than voice healthy controls. They also reported the highest incidence of general voice problems in the VLT. Conclusions Vocal loading relates to prolonged phonation time at high fundamental frequencies. Patients with functional dysphonia experience general and specific voice problems permanently, whereas women with everyday vocal load and voice complaints recover during leisure. This may explain why the latter group does not seek voice therapy.
KW - Functional dysphonia
KW - Long-time voice measurement
KW - Occupational dysphonia
KW - Vocal loading
KW - Voice accumulation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85002170806&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jvoice.2016.08.008
DO - 10.1016/j.jvoice.2016.08.008
M3 - Article
C2 - 27743846
AN - SCOPUS:85002170806
SN - 0892-1997
VL - 31
SP - 246.e1-246.e10
JO - Journal of Voice
JF - Journal of Voice
IS - 2
ER -