DAVID L. MANDELL,
MD; PEAK WOO, MD; DANIEL S. BEHIN; JACQUELINE MOJICA, MS; AMY MINASLAN,
MS; MARK L. URKEN, MD; HUGH F. BILLER, MD
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
Phonation after partial laryngeal ablative surgery has not often been
examined. Videolaryngostroboscopic recordings made after vertical partial
laryngectomy (VPL) were retrospectively reviewed and correlated with patient
historical and operative factors. Among VPL patients (n = 42), the most
common site of vibration during phonation was the contralateral false vocal
fold (17/42 patients or 40.5%), followed by the contralateral arytenoid
mucosa (10/42 or 23.8%) and the contralateral true vocal fold (8/42 patients
or 19.0%). There was no overall difference in vocal quality judgment with
respect to site of vibration (ANOVA, p = .373). Vocal quality scores were
similar with use of the pyriform mucosal flap versus other reconstructive
methods (Student's t-test, p = .568). This study highlights the fact that
reconstruction of a new vibratory source after VPL is important for voice
production. Because VPL patients infrequently demonstrated true vocal fold
vibration, alternative sites (ie, false vocal fold, arytenoid mucosa) must
be considered as new phonatory sources after VPL. |