Abstract

Dysphonia secondary to posterior glottic aerodynamic incompetence can often be recognizable acoustically, but difficult to document visually. This mechanical impairment in posterior glottic closure is the result of injury caused by airway instrumentation. The difficulty of recognition of this entity is due to posterior supraglottic soft tissue that obscures the complete view during posterior glottic adduction, the lack of a structural organization of the cricoarytenoid region injury that leads to this disorder, and the lack of nomenclature. A retrospective assessment was done on 3 patients who underwent surgical reconstruction to correct posterior phonatory incompetence subsequent to laryngotracheal intubation. All 3 had sustained an injury to the cricoarytenoid joints, and 2 of the 3 had undergone paraglottic space medialization laryngoplasty that failed to solve the posterior glottic insufficiency. New procedures were designed and performed in these patients to correct the posterior glottic incompetence and are described: laryngofissure and partial posterior cricoid resection, endoscopic pharyngoepiglottic-aryepiglottic fold advancement-rotation flap with interarytenoid interposition, and interarytenoid submucosal implant augmentation. Although the academic literature is replete with reports describing stenosis resulting from impaired cricoarytenoid joint abduction, the term glottic diastasis provides nomenclature for the inability to normally adduct the arytenoid cartilages. The initial experience with surgical reconstruction is preliminary, but encouraging.

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