Christy L. Ludlow PhD, Geralyn M. Schulz PhD
Toshiyuki Yamashita MD, PhD, Frederic W.-B. Deleyiannis MD
Sensorimotor responses to repeated electrical stimulation of the superior
laryngeal nerve were compared in 8 patients with adductor spasmodic dysphonia
(ADSD) and 11 normal controls to determine if adductor response disinhibition
occurred in ADSD. Pairs of electrical pulses were presented at inter stimulus
intervals varying from 100 to 5,000 milliseconds (ms). Three responses
were measured in thyroarytenoid muscles: ipsilateral R1 responses at 17
ms and ipsilateral and contralateral R2 responses between 60 and 75 ms.
Conditioned response characteristics, the percent occurrence and percentage
amplitude of initial responses, were measures of response inhibition. As
a group, the patients had reduced response inhibition: their conditioned
ipsilateral R1 response amplitudes were increased, as was the frequency
of their conditioned contralateral muscle responses (p < .002) compared
to normal. However, the patients' initial responses were normal in latency
and frequency characteristics, demonstrating that the brain stem mechanisms
for these responses were intact. These results suggest a central disinhibition
of laryngeal responses to sensory input in ADSD. |