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Surgical voice restoration following ablative surgery for laryngeal and hypopharyngeal carcinoma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2006

I. Ahmad
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, City Hospital, Birmingham, UK.
B. N. Kumar
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, City Hospital, Birmingham, UK.
K. Radford
Affiliation:
Department of Speech and Language Therapy, City Hospital, Birmingham, UK.
J. O’Connell
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, City Hospital, Birmingham, UK.
A. J. G. Batch
Affiliation:
Department of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, City Hospital, Birmingham, UK.

Abstract

Surgical voice restoration is an important part of functional rehabilitation of patients following ablative surgery for laryngeal and hypopharyngeal carcinoma. The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the functional status with regard to speech of a cohort of 100 patients (age ranged 34-84 years), who underwent laryngectomy and laryngopharyngectomy over a 10-year period (1989-1999).

Ninety-two patients consented to surgical voice restoration. Primary tracheoesophageal punctures were performed in 70 and secondary punctures in 22 (mainly after jejunal flap reconstruction). Nine patients were excluded from this analysis (seven patients died prior to assessment, one had the prosthesis removed at her request and one patient had insufficient follow-up). Tracheoesophageal speech was assessed in the remaining 83 patients using a rating scale measuring the number of syllables per breath, use of voice and intelligibility by non-professional listeners. Currently, Provox 2 valves are being used in the majority of patients. Overall tracheoesophageal speech results were good in 45/83 (54.2 per cent), average in 22/83 (26.5 per cent) and poor in 15/83 (18 per cent). One patient could not develop tracheoesophageal speech. The majority of laryngectomy patients had good speech but in patients who had complex reconstructions tracheoesophageal speech was mostly rated as average.

Average to good speech in more than two-thirds of the cohort of patients show that surgical voice restoration is a highly successful and valuable technique to restore speech functions after ablative surgery for laryngeal and hypopharyngeal carcinoma.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Royal Society of Medicine Press Limited 2000

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