Daniel G. Deschler MD, E. Thomas Doherty PhD, James P. Anthony,
MD
Charles G. Reed PhD, Mark I. Singer, MD
Tracheoesophageal voice restoration after laryngectomy is possible with
a variety of neopharyngeal reconstructions. We have used the tubed radial
forearm free flap for neopharyngeal reconstruction since 1991. Six patients
have undergone voice restoration with the Blom-Singer prosthesis and were
available for quantitative and qualitative speech analysis. These patients
were compared to five laryngectomy patients with standard pharyngeal closures
and similar voice restorations. The free flap patients produced similar
loudness levels compared to the standards with soft speech (52.06 dB and
47.19 dB, respectively) and loud speech (62.66 dB and 60.91 dB, respectively).
The free flap patients demonstrated adequate intelligibility, with fundamental
frequencies comparable to standards (124.82 Hz and 135.66 Hz, respectively),
although with increased jitter (5.00% versus 1.96%). NO differences were
statistically significant, but evaluation by trained and naive listeners
demonstrated significant differences in voice quality. This quantitative
and qualitative analysis of tracheoesophageal speech after radial forearm
free flap reconstruction of the neopharynx demonstrates that acceptable
voice can be achieved, but with limitations.
KEY WORDS-laryngectomy, neopharyngeal reconstruction, speech, tracheoesophageal
voice, tubed radial forearm free flap. |