Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1102141 Journal of Voice 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryObjectiveTo investigate the immediate effects of the Finnish resonance tube method for teachers with behavioral dysphonia.MethodsTwenty-five female teachers (m = 39.9 years of age) with at least a 5-year history of dysphonia were included. Additional inclusion criteria were the diagnosis of chronic behavioral dysphonia with an indication for speech therapy and the absence of any prior speech therapy. Subjects produced three sets of 10 tokens of sustained phonation with a 1-minute rest interval between tokens into a 27-cm glass tube immersed in at least 2 cm of water. Voice samples were recorded before and after these sets. The effects of these exercises were evaluated by self-assessment, auditory perceptual analysis, and acoustic evaluation involving extraction of fundamental frequency and visual spectrographic analysis.ResultsSixty-eight percent of the teachers reported increased phonatory comfort and 52% reported improved voice quality after performing the exercises. Perceptual analysis indicated improved voice quality in the samples of counting numbers, confirmed by decreased instability, subharmonics, noise in high frequencies, and the tendency for reduced low frequency noise on spectrographic evaluation. Additionally, mean fundamental frequency decreased.ConclusionThe Finnish resonance tube method increased phonatory comfort and vocal changes suggestive diminished hyperfunction.

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