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Active Not RecruitingNCT07474740

Evaluating the Efficacy of Voice Therapy for Neurogenic Voice Disorders

Characterization and Treatment of Essential Vocal Tremor

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
40 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Texas at Austin · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of voice therapy for neurogenic voice disorders. The main questions are: Does voice therapy improve patient-reported quality of life in speakers with neurogenic voice disorders? Does voice therapy improve listener perception of voice in speakers with neurogenic voice disorders? Does voice therapy improve acoustical analyses of voice in speakers with neurogenic voice disorders? Does voice therapy improve physiologic function in speakers with neurogenic voice disorders?

Detailed description

Neurogenic voice disorders negatively impact communication-related quality of life for millions of patients. Yet current options for medical treatment including pharmacological and surgical interventions do not consistently improve voice and can have adverse effects. Although some patients with neurogenic voice disorders receive behavioral treatment like voice therapy, systematic treatment research evaluating the efficacy of behavioral treatment is limited. For example, in speakers with voice disorders related to essential tremor, the most common movement disorder in the world, only five studies have evaluated the effects of behavioral interventions. Of these studies, two were case studies (N=1, N=2), two were single-case experiments (N=1, N=3), and one was a prospective group study comparing control and experimental conditions (N=10). These studies evaluated a variety of treatment ingredients using various functional, perceptual, and acoustical treatment outcomes. However, some treatment ingredients and outcome measures were not specific to the underlying voice impairments in essential tremor. In neurogenic voice disorders with other etiologies like dystonia, more studies with larger sample sizes have been conducted. However, only eight studies have been published: two were case studies (N=1, N=1), one was a single-case experiment (N=1), one was a prospective group study comparing pre- and post-treatment phases (N=36), one was a retrospective group study comparing control and experimental conditions (N=37), one was a randomized cross-over study (N=9), one was a non-randomized controlled trial (N=17), and one was a randomized controlled trial (N=31). These studies also evaluated various treatment ingredients using functional, perceptual, and acoustical outcomes, as well as aerodynamic and acoustic outcomes. But again, some treatment ingredients and outcome measures were not specific to the underlying voice impairments related to dystonia. Finally, although a considerably higher number of treatment studies with greater sample sizes have been conducted with speakers who have voice disorders related to Parkinson's disease, the most widely studied treatment ingredients have limitations. For example, Lee Silverman Voice Therapy requires high-intensity, high-frequency treatment provided by speech-language pathologists with specialized training, and expiratory muscle strength training is also high-frequency, high-intensity treatment that requires specific equipment and physiologic capabilities. Thus, there is an important need for systematic treatment research in speakers with neurogenic voice disorders using treatment ingredients and outcome measures that are specific to patients' neurophysiologic impairments and functional limitations.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBreathy voiceParticipants will be trained to produce a breathy voice to reduce the perceptual severity of vocal tremor

Timeline

Start date
2024-06-04
Primary completion
2028-06-04
Completion
2028-06-04
First posted
2026-03-16
Last updated
2026-03-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07474740. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.