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Presbyphonia: Is Voice Therapy A Good Choice For Your Patient?

Is voice therapy the right choice for your presbyphonia patient? We uncover the best treatments and their benefits.

October 17, 2016

3 min. read

Decision making in the treatment of presbyphonia is daunting for the thoughtful clinician. Several clinical questions often arise:

  • Is the atrophy of the vocal folds and the resulting glottal gap too large to make the patient a candidate for voice therapy?

  • Is the patient too frail to benefit from therapy?

  • What about those patients who have complaints of dysphagia?

These can be confusing decisions. With a few quick tips, we can demystify these questions and ensure confidence when determining candidacy for voice therapy.

What is the Best Treatment for Presbyphonia?

While evidence supports the use of voice therapy, injection laryngoplasty, and bilateral thyroplasty, no studies compare their treatment outcomes.1 Most physicians recommend voice therapy first simply because it is the most conservative intervention.1 But, is that the best way to determine appropriate treatment?

Probably not, butthe evidence has yet to support a best therapy. In the meantime, these four parameters can guide us in determining who to see for voice therapy and who to refer back to the physician for other choices:

  1. Glottal gap

  2. Overall frailty

  3. Accompanying swallowing problems

  4. Cognition

Glottal Gap

If you are lucky enough to see an image of the vocal foldsor be involved with the vocal fold imaging, you are steps ahead of the game in understanding the size of the glottal gap and the extent of vocal fold atrophy. In thebest candidates for therapy, you will seea small glottal gap as evidenced by Mau, Jacobson & Garrett. They examined outcomes from voice therapy in 67 older adults diagnosed with presbyphonia. Patients with what they called slit closure experienced the best outcomes.2

Overall Frailty

Frailty is a state of high vulnerability to negative health-related outcomes, such as falls, physical and cognitive decline, hospitalization, physical disability, and mortality.3It is common in aging and more common in people with multiple co-morbidities.

It's important to note the link between frailty and loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia).4 People with more co-morbidities leading to frailty show poorer outcomes in therapy.2

Accompanying Swallowing Problems

Multiple factors cause dysphagia in the elderly.5Significant dysphagia, as a result of aspiration, due to glottal incompetence in presbyphonia is rare, but, if present, I always defer for injection augmentation or bilateral thyroplasty.

With that being said, many presbyphonic patients complain of cough not associated with dysphagia and of increased difficulty swallowing in the presence of a normal swallow study. Recently Kang & Lott proposed the existence of a muscle tension dysphagia.6My patients undergoing exuberant voice therapy using PhoRTE anecdotally remarked that it reduced their cough and improved their swallowing.7

Cognition

With aging comes changes in cognition and mood. The term age-associated memory loss is a new topic of interest and has a DSMV category.8 The ability to attend to treatment tasks and follow directions are important parameters in determining candidacy for therapy.9

Depression more common in aging adults10 impacts adherence to voice therapy. The short Geriatric Depression Scale can gauge if the patient will likely be successful in therapy.

The Right Fit

Voice therapy has the potential to help many of the people who come to our offices diagnosed with presbylaryngeus. Nonetheless, carefully deciding candidacy for therapy is paramount.


Below, watch Edie Hapner discuss the multifactorial nature of voice therapy as well as provide a before and after example of a patient's success in a short video from her course, The Aging Voice Part 1: The Impact, Causes, and Treatment for Presbyphonia.

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