Comparison of arytenoid vertical height discrepancy in normal versus patients with vocal cord palsy

2019 
Abstract Objective Cadaveric experiments and more recently clinical data have demonstrated that patients with vertical height discrepancy between their arytenoids experience poorer voice outcomes in patients with unilateral vocal cord palsy (UVP) after medialisation laryngoplasty. However, the presence or severity of height discrepancy in normal patients without UVP has not yet been clearly defined. Study design Case-control study. Setting Tertiary Australian hospitals. Subjects and methods A retrospective review was performed on patients who underwent high computed tomography imaging of the neck. Scans were assessed for discrepancy in arytenoid vertical height discrepancy and compared to a cohort with known UVP. Results 44 normal patients (50% female, mean age 57.6 ± 14.8 years) were compared to 23 patients with UVP (43.4% female, mean age 52.3 ± 14.9 years.) Normal patients were found to have a smaller height discrepancy compared to UVP patients (student's t-test,2.00 mm ± 0.00 vs 2.39 mm ± 0.72, p  Conclusion This study suggests that discrepancy is pathologic, and it is plausible that this results in acoustic consequences.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    15
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []