Physiologic and phonatory characteristics of 23 subjects with adductor spastic dysphonia were studied, including examination of the laryngeal appearance by fiberoptic nasoendoscopy, neurologic examination, and measurement of phonatory airflow and speaking fundamental frequency. These characteristics displayed considerable heterogeneity among the subjects investigated. Three patterns of laryngeal appearance during phonation were observed: vocal fold adduction, associated ventricular fold constriction, and approximation of the laryngeal inlet. Eight of 13 subjects demonstrated some neurologic abnormality. For the majority of subjects, the airflow demonstrated marked variability during sustained phonation; for different subjects, this variability was observed to be associated with either an oscillatory or irregular airflow pattern. The modal speaking fundamental frequency for the women and men with adductor spastic dysphonia was not significantly different from that for age- and sex-matched controls.
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