ILAN HOCHMAN, MD TEL AVIV, ISRAEL
ROBERT T. SATALOFF, MD, DMA PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
ROBERT E. HILLMAN, PHD STEVEN M. ZEITELS, MD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Vascular malformations such as ectasias and varices (Es and Vs) are frequently
encountered in patients who present with recurrent vocal fold hemorrhage
and/or other traumatic vocal fold lesions. This study examined Es and Vs
with regard to their anatomic presentation, phonomicrosurgical management,
and treatment outcome. Forty-two patients (39 of them singers) were treated
for a total of 87 Es and Vs: 67 of 87 (77%) were on the superior surface
of the vocal fold and 20 of 87 (23%) were on the medial surface of the
vocal fold. Eighty-three percent were located in the middle musculomembranous
region (the striking zone), where the greatest aerodynamically induced
shearing stresses occur during phonation. Treatment was performed with
carbon dioxide laser cauterization (13 patients), or a new technique utilizing
cold instrument excision by means of epithelial cordotomies (23 patients),
while a combined approach was employed in 6 patients. Comparisons of preoperative
and postoperative stroboscopy revealed improvement or no significant change
in all patients in whom the cold instrument technique was used, and increased
epithelial stiffness was noted in 4 of 19 patients in whom the carbon dioxide
laser was used. Clearing the striking zone appears to have halted further
hemorrhages by removing the fragile Es and Vs from this injury-prone region
of the vocal fold. Interpretations of stroboscopic examinations were directed
at providing new insights into the biomechanical forces of vocal fold vibration
that probably contribute to the genesis of Es and Vs in the vocal folds.
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