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Functional voice disorders

A review of 109 patients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2007

M. W. M. Bridger*
Affiliation:
From the Department of Otolaryngology and Speech Therapy, The Middlesex Hospital, London
Ruth Epstein
Affiliation:
From the Department of Otolaryngology and Speech Therapy, The Middlesex Hospital, London
*
Mr. M. Bridger, F.R.C.S., Department of ENT, The Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street, London W1.

Abstract

The records of 109 patients, presenting with functional voice disorder during the years 1977–1981, have been reviewed. The mean age was 45 years and the F: M ratio is 2: 1. Excess voice use was not obviously an aetiological factor. Sixty-one of the 109 patients (56 per cent) were cured by speech therapy, in that their voices returned to their pre-morbid state, and a further 28 (26 per cent) were improved by therapy; seven patients (6 per cent) did not improve and 13 (12 per cent) were lost to follow-up. Of the patients that were ‘cured’, 54 per cent were discharged after three months' treatment and 72 per cent after six months' treatment. Eight per cent required treatment for more than a year.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © JLO (1984) Limited 1983

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References

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