Nationwide over one million or 6-9%1 of all children suffer from dysphonia. Dysphonia can be detrimental to children both psychologically and academically, hence early identification and restoration of optimal vocal health is critical. Direct visualization of vocal fold vibratory patterns is fundamental to appropriate diagnosis and treatment of vocal fold pathology. Objective assessments of vocal fold physiology are non-existent in the field of pediatric voice care, leading to delayed diagnosis and deferred development of effective treatments. The long term goal of the proposed research is to improve treatment outcomes and early identification in children with hoarseness by establishing age appropriate quantitative measurements of immature vocal fold function that contribute to voice disorders. To accomplish this goal, it is necessary to quantify vocal fold vibrations resulting from differences in the multilayered vocal fold structure of children compared with adults. Most voice problems in children are thought to be caused by mechanical trauma to the vocal folds manifested as high impact stress, leading to the development of vocal nodules. The specific goal of this project is to identify the impact of growth and development of the layered structure of the vocal folds on vocal physiology and the relationship of these factors to the development of vocal fold nodules in children. This research proposes 1 milestone-driven aim and 2 hypotheses-driven aims. Therefore, the specific aims of this application are: 1) to optimize a 2-point laser projection system developed in our laboratory for precision and to compute expected measurement variability to fully translate use of this system to children, 2) to quantify the relationship between short vocal fold length and increased vibratory amplitude during the developmental process in children with and without nodules, and 3) to quantify spatiotemporal features of vocal fold impact stress in children as a function of age and pathology. A total of 80 children will be recruited to participate (ages: 5-12), 40 with and 40 without nodules. Forty adults (21-45 years) will be recruited to obtain the developmental end point for maturation of vibratory motion because adults have a well-defined layered structure of the vocal folds. The following spatiotemporal features of vocal fold vibrations will be measured using a novel 2-point pediatric laser high speed digital imaging system to identify impact stress: mid membranous amplitude-to-length ratio, peak vocal fold acceleration(mm/sec2), peak closing velocity (mm/sec), open quotient, and vibratory stiffness (ratio of maximum velocity by maximum displacement) and closed quotient. The proposed research is significant in filling a gap in knowledge concerning the most effective methods for assessing vibratory function and identifying predisposing factors in children with hoarseness. The fundamental knowledge of vibratory function obtained from this work will directly translate to the clinic by producing meaningful findings and measures that can be applied to pediatric vocal health outcomes and will thus reduce the burden of illness and disability caused by voice disorders in children.

Public Health Relevance

It has been estimated that over one million1 children suffer from voice disorders nationwide, with potentially detrimental psychological effects. Knowledge of vocal fold vibratory motion is fundamental for measuring treatment outcomes in children, but has been slow to emerge due to technical challenges. This work is the first to examine spatiotemporal measurements of vocal fold motion that lead to the development of impact stress and voice disorders in children and to use a novel custom-built pediatric imaging system to examine the relationship of the immature vocal system and the formation of vocal fold nodules.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
5R03DC011360-02
Application #
8196733
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDC1-SRB-Y (55))
Program Officer
Shekim, Lana O
Project Start
2010-12-01
Project End
2012-07-31
Budget Start
2011-12-01
Budget End
2012-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$87,575
Indirect Cost
$35,708
Name
University of Kentucky
Department
Physical Medicine & Rehab
Type
Schools of Allied Health Profes
DUNS #
939017877
City
Lexington
State
KY
Country
United States
Zip Code
40506
Patel, Rita R; Forrest, Karen; Hedges, Drew (2017) Relationship Between Acoustic Voice Onset and Offset and Selected Instances of Oscillatory Onset and Offset in Young Healthy Men and Women. J Voice 31:389.e9-389.e17
Patel, Rita R; Walker, Reuben; Döllinger, Michael (2017) Oscillatory Onset and Offset in Young Vocally Healthy Adults Across Various Measurement Methods. J Voice 31:512.e17-512.e24
Patel, Rita R (2016) Vibratory onset and offset times in children: A laryngeal imaging study. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol 87:11-7
Patel, Rita; Donohue, Kevin D; Unnikrishnan, Harikrishnan et al. (2015) Kinematic measurements of the vocal-fold displacement waveform in typical children and adult populations: quantification of high-speed endoscopic videos. J Speech Lang Hear Res 58:227-40
Hüttner, Björn; Luegmair, Georg; Patel, Rita R et al. (2015) Development of a time-dependent numerical model for the assessment of non-stationary pharyngoesophageal tissue vibrations after total laryngectomy. Biomech Model Mechanobiol 14:169-84
Patel, Rita; Dubrovskiy, Denis; Döllinger, Michael (2014) Characterizing vibratory kinematics in children and adults with high-speed digital imaging. J Speech Lang Hear Res 57:S674-86
Patel, Rita R; Dubrovskiy, Denis; Döllinger, Michael (2014) Measurement of glottal cycle characteristics between children and adults: physiological variations. J Voice 28:476-86
Patel, Rita R; Donohue, Kevin D; Lau, Daniel et al. (2013) In Vivo measurement of pediatric vocal fold motion using structured light laser projection. J Voice 27:463-72
Patel, Rita R; Dixon, Angela; Richmond, Annamary et al. (2012) Pediatric high speed digital imaging of vocal fold vibration: a normative pilot study of glottal closure and phase closure characteristics. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol 76:954-9
Dollinger, Michael; Dubrovskiy, Denis; Patel, Rita (2012) Spatiotemporal analysis of vocal fold vibrations between children and adults. Laryngoscope 122:2511-8

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