Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment for Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia by Type 2 Thyroplasty Using Titanium Bridges
For adductor spasmodic dysphonia, there is a need for establishing a new therapy under the present circumstance where no standard therapy has been established yet and existing therapies fail to provide permanent effect. Evaluation of the efficacy of type 2 thyroplasty using titanium bridges will expand the therapeutic options available for adductor spasmodic dysphonia and establishment of a standard therapy.
Spasmodic dysphonia is a type of functional dysphonia not associated with any organic
abnormality or palsy of the larynx. The speech disorder in this disease is caused by
involuntary and intermittent spasms of the intralaryngeal muscles (Castelon, 2002).
There is no curative treatment for this disease. Conservative therapies include voice
training (voice therapy) and muscle relaxant medication to ease the tension in the larynx
during speech, although there is not much evidence to support the effectiveness of either. An
internationally employed therapy is local injection of botulinum toxin A into the
intralaryngeal muscles to suppress involuntary movements of the vocal cords. The injection
can be administered percutaneously from the anterior neck within a short time, and a number
of reports have indicated a greater than 90% efficacy of this treatment (Tisch 2003, Blitzer
2010). However, this local injection therapy is effective only for a limited period of 3 to 4
months, and periodic injections have to be continued throughout life for maintaining relief
from the symptoms under the present circumstances.
Type 2 thyroplasty is an operative procedure in which the thyroid cartilage is incised at the
midline, and the incised gap is opened and fixed with the thyroarytenoid muscles attached on
both sides, so that the vocal cords do not shut too tightly during speech even with strong
adduction of the glottis, as the symptoms of adductor spasmodic dysphonia are caused by
excessive closure of the glottis due to strong involuntary and intermittent adduction of the
intralaryngeal muscles (Isshiki 2001).
In 2002, the titanium bridge made of biocompatible pure titanium was developed in Japan for
exclusive use in type 2 thyroplasty (Isshiki 2004). When the titanium bridge was used in
actual cases, the symptoms disappeared without recurrence after the operation (Sanuki 2007,
Sanuki 2009, Isshiki & Sanuki 2009, Sanuki 2010).
There is a need for establishing a new therapy under the present circumstance where no
standard therapy has been established yet and existing therapies fail to provide permanent
effect. Evaluation of the efficacy of type 2 thyroplasty using titanium bridges will expand
the therapeutic options available for adductor spasmodic dysphonia and establishment of a
standard therapy.
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