Katsuhide Inagi, MD, Charles N. Ford, MD, Arthur A. Rodriquez,
MD,
Edward Schultz, PhD Diane M. Bless, PhD Dennis M. Heisfy, PhD
This pilot study was designed to determine if the interval between repeated
botulinum toxin injections influenced physiologic and histologic effects
on laryngeal muscles in a rat model. The physiologic measurements included
digitized videomicroscopic recording of vocal fold movement and electromyography.
The histologic measurements included muscle fiber size and digitized optical
density of laryngeal muscles after glycogen depletion by electrical stimulation.
The results demonstrated that the effect of timing ofthe second injection
was strongly correlated to laryngeal changes. Most notable were results
in the subjects that underwent injections 6 weeks apart. We hypothesize
that these findings might be related to terminal axonal sprouting with
reinnervation. The results from this study help confirm and expand the
validity of using the rat laryngeal model to understand the effect of botulinum
toxin. Moreover, we believe that the data might be extrapolated to prove
useful in predicting human responses to botulinum toxin treatment for functional
dystonias such as spasmodic dysphonia.
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