Clinical and laboratory characteristics of focal laryngeal dystonia: Study of 110 cases
- 1 June 1988
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Laryngoscope
- Vol. 98 (6) , 636-640
- https://doi.org/10.1288/00005537-198806000-00012
Abstract
Spastic dysphonia is a syndrome often producing a strain-strangle voice. We have previously classified most of these patients as having focal laryngeal dystonia, a disorder of central motor processing. In a study of 1,280 cases of dystonia registered at the Dystonia Clinical Research Center at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, we found 110 patients who had vocal cord involvement. These patients had historical information evaluated for age of onset (mean 34.6 years), duration of symptoms (mean 13.8 years), sex (1.4:1 female to male) family history (positive in 23%), and primary (66%) and secondary (34%) etiology; neurological evaluation for other dystonic involvement (25% with segmental cranial involvement, 23% with generalized dystonia) or tremor (irregular 23%, regular 6% on EMG). Treatment options were evaluated and included speech therapy, psychotherapy, biofeedback (with limited success), systemic medication (limited success except in abductor cases), nerve section (with late failure rate), and the use of botulinum toxin (improvement in all 34 injected patients).Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Percutaneous laryngeal electromyography for evaluation of neurogenic disorders, myopathies and spastic dysphoniaElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1985
- Abnormal Parasympathetic Vagal Function in Patients with Spasmodic DysphoniaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1984
- Neuropathology of spasmodic dysphoniaThe Laryngoscope, 1983
- Focal Cranial DystoniaJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1983
- Adductor spastic dysphonia: Three years after recurrent laryngeal nerve resectionThe Laryngoscope, 1983
- Spastic dysphonia, Meige disease, and torsion dystoniaNeurology, 1982
- Adductor Spastic Dysphonia as a Sign of Essential (Voice) TremorJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1981
- Spastic Dysphonia. II. Comparison with Essential (Voice) Tremor and Other Neurologic and Psychogenic DysphoniasJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1968
- Neuro-Psychiatric Aspects of Spastic DysphoniaFolia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica, 1965
- SPASTIC DYSPHONIA (“INSPIRATORY SPEECH”)Brain, 1939