Modern Techniques of Vocal Rehabilitation |
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Page 10
... hoarseness but also following the elimination of hoarseness . Vocal misuse and abuse may be characterized by three stages , moving from mild to severe in symptomatology : sensory , audi- tory , and visual . Patients may experience one ...
... hoarseness but also following the elimination of hoarseness . Vocal misuse and abuse may be characterized by three stages , moving from mild to severe in symptomatology : sensory , audi- tory , and visual . Patients may experience one ...
Page 23
... hoarseness , finds : " The most common principal cause of hoarse - voice was the throat tension resulting from the effort to speak at a level far below optimal pitch . " Hoarseness is the most prevalent clinical voice quality . Boland ...
... hoarseness , finds : " The most common principal cause of hoarse - voice was the throat tension resulting from the effort to speak at a level far below optimal pitch . " Hoarseness is the most prevalent clinical voice quality . Boland ...
Page 87
... hoarseness was objectively determined from spectrographic analysis of 3 vowels before therapy by using the categories established by Yanagihara ( 1962 ) to classify hoarseness into four types , Type I ( slight ) through Type IV ...
... hoarseness was objectively determined from spectrographic analysis of 3 vowels before therapy by using the categories established by Yanagihara ( 1962 ) to classify hoarseness into four types , Type I ( slight ) through Type IV ...
Contents
VOCAL REHABILITATION | 5 |
CAUSES OF VOCAL MISUSE AND ABUSE | 11 |
TONE FOCUS AND VOCAL MISUSE | 21 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
aphonia Brodnitz CHART clusive Therapy Excel comparison between males contact ulcer cordectomy esophageal voice Fair Excel Fair Totals falsetto functional misphonia hemilaryngectomy hoarseness hysterical aphonia incipient spastic dysphonia individual laryngeal laryngectomy laryngologist laryngopharynx lesions leukoplakia long-term therapy M F M F M F misuse and abuse negative vocal symptoms nodules optimal pitch level organic dysphonias paralytic dysphonia Parkinson's disease patients completing therapy patients entering therapy Patients Evaluation Entered patients seen percent completed therapy percent entered therapy percent had long-term percent had short-term pharyngeal phonation pitch and tone pitch range polypoid degeneration polyps Postoperative psychological return No surgery short-term therapy sound speaking voice Speech Disord therapist Therapy clusive Therapy Therapy Length Totals Therapy Results Totals throat tient tion tone focus Totals Long-term Short-term vocal folds vocal fry vocal image vocal misuse vocal psychotherapy vocal rehabilitation vocal rest vocal therapy voice disorder voice patients voice problem voice therapy voice type volume vowel