Abstract

Previous stroboscopic studies of human vocal cord paralysis have been infrequent and have lacked documentation of the site of lesion. In order to study human laryngeal paralysis, the recurrent and superior laryngeal nerves were infiltrated unilaterally with lidocaine hydrochloride in three human volunteers. Vagal paralysis was simulated by combined (superior and recurrent) infiltration in one volunteer. Additionally, 20 patients with untreated laryngeal paralysis were studied from the voice laboratory at UCLA. In addition to videostroboscopic analysis, photoglottography and electroglottography were performed and synchronized with the stroboscopic images. The most significant finding in stroboscopy of the paralyzed larynx was the asymmetry of traveling wave motion. The traveling wave on the normal vocal fold had a faster wave velocity that created a phase difference in the vibration of the two folds. The wave also traversed a greater distance along the vocal fold mucosa on the normal side. No patient or volunteer with untreated laryngeal paralysis had a symmetric traveling wave, either in superior or recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis. Synchronization with glottography indicated that the differentiated electroglottographic waveform provides useful information about the timing of glottic opening and closure in states of asymmetric laryngeal vibration. Implications for future studies and for the diagnosis of laryngeal paralysis are discussed.

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