
pmid: 27839705
Low-level light therapy (LLLT) is effective in reducing inflammation, promoting wound healing, and preventing tissue damage, but has not yet been studied in the treatment of voice disorders. The objective of this study was to investigate the possible effectiveness of LLLT in attenuating symptoms of vocal fatigue created by a vocal loading task as measured by acoustic, aerodynamic, and self-reported vocal effort.In a randomized, prospective study, 16 vocally healthy adults divided into four groups underwent a 1-hour vocal loading procedure, followed by infrared wavelength LLLT (828 nm), red wavelength LLLT (628 nm), heat, or no heat-light (control) treatment targeting the laryngeal region of the ventral neck surface. Phonation threshold pressure (PTP), relative fundamental frequency (RFF), and the inability to produce soft voice (IPSV) self-perceptual rating scale were recorded (1) at baseline, (2) immediately after vocal loading, (3) after treatment, and (4) 1 hour after treatment.Vocal loading significantly increased PTP and IPSV and decreased onset and offset RFFs, consistent with a shift toward vocal dysfunction. Red light significantly normalized the combination of PTP, IPSV, and RFF measures compared to other conditions.RFF is sensitive to a vocal loading task in conjunction with PTP and IPSV, and red LLLT may have a normalizing effect on objective and subjective measures of vocal fatigue. The results of this study lay the groundwork and rationale for future research to optimize LLLT wavelength combinations and overall dose.
Adult, Male, Time Factors, Voice Disorders, Voice Quality, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Acoustics, Recovery of Function, Speech Acoustics, Young Adult, Treatment Outcome, Speech Production Measurement, Speech Perception, Humans, Female, Prospective Studies, Self Report, Larynx, Low-Level Light Therapy, Boston
Adult, Male, Time Factors, Voice Disorders, Voice Quality, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Acoustics, Recovery of Function, Speech Acoustics, Young Adult, Treatment Outcome, Speech Production Measurement, Speech Perception, Humans, Female, Prospective Studies, Self Report, Larynx, Low-Level Light Therapy, Boston
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