Abstract

Acoustic phonatory events were identified in 10 women diagnosed with adductor spasmodic dysphonia (ADSD) and compared to 5 women and 5 men diagnosed with muscle tension dysphonia (MTD). The three acoustic parameters examined during sustained vowel production and reading included phonatory breaks, aperiodicity, and frequency shifts. Intra- and intermeasurer correlations showed high reliability for the measures. Findings indicated that those with ADSD produced a greater number of aberrant acoustic events than those with MTD. The results suggested that: (1) only those with ADSD show evidence of phonatory breaks during vocalization, albeit a sustained vowel or voicing during reading; (2) those with ADSD demonstrate greater variation in the type of aberrant acoustic events produced as a function of speech task. The latter point suggests that control of the larynx varies as a function of task demand, a finding not evident in the functionally based disorder of MTD. MTD is a disorder that often presents itself in a similar clinical manner to ADSD because of its perceptual commonalties and resembling laryngoscopic characteristics. The acoustic analysis presented in this study could be used as a method to assist in distinguishing between the two disorder types.

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