Hoarseness-Causes and Treatments
Hoarseness-Causes and Treatments
Hoarseness-Causes and Treatments
Treatments
SUMMARY
Background
Methods
• Acute and chronic laryngitis (accounting for 42.1% and 9.7% of cases
respectively)
• Functional dysphonia (30%)
• Benign and malignant tumors (10.7 to 31.0% and 2.2 to 3.0% respectively)
• Neurogenic factors such as vocal cord paralysis (2.8 to 8%)
• Physiological aging (2%)
• Psychogenic factors (2.0 to 2.2%) (1, e5).
Acute laryngitis
Organic
Chronic laryngitis
dysphonia
Benign and
malignant
tumors
Acute laryngitis
Tuberculosis
• rheumatoid arthritis
• systemic lupus erythematosus
• Wegener disease
• and laryngeal sarcoidosis
amyloidosis
are among the internal diseases with occasional laryngeal involvement. In all these diseases
interdisciplinary management is mandatory. The treatment is usually based on experience from case
series.
Neurogenic causes
Vocal cord paralysis
• Vocal cord paralysis may be partial (reduced mobility) or
complete, caused by damage to the recurrent laryngeal nerve; a
dysphonia arises from the incomplete glottic closure or irregular
vibration of the vocal cords. Vocal cord paresis may be the first
symptom of malignancy. The treatment should begin with speech.
If voice quality has shown no decisive improvement after 2
months and incomplete vocal cord closure persists, temporary
vocal cord filling (injection glottoplasty/ augmentation) is
recommended, e.g., with hyaluronic acid. Once the paresis has
persisted for 12 months, recovery is unlikely. In this case
autologous fat (less resorbable) should be used for injection
glottoplasty, or external thyroplasty can be performed.
Spasmodic dysphonia
• Spasmodic dysphonia (SD) is one of the focal
dystonias. This severe dysphonia leads to
involuntary spasms of the laryngeal
musculature with increased adduction or
abduction of the vocal cords, depending on
subtype. comprises injection of the neurotoxic
protein botulinum toxin into the affected vocal
cord muscles.
Vocal cord dysfunction