Translate

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia

What is Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia

This disease called abductor spasmodic dysphonia is a condition in which muscle spasms develop suddenly to induce the vocal folds to keep open. It can generally be described as a voice condition in which the muscles of the throat freeze and develop involuntary spasms.

Can this disease be described as common?
This condition affects and alters your speech uncontrollably. All ages, especially those within the bracket of between 30 and 50 are usually affected. Statistically, it’s speculated that at least 50, 000 Northern Americans suffer this disease. This figure is even thought to be higher in some quarters owing to the fact that some cases may be diagnosed wrongly.

As an illustration, some older people who suffer this disease may be led to imagine that their problem is as a result of age.

As the person suffering this disease speaks, the air which escapes from their lungs explodes between their vocal cords. These cords are elastic, and stretch from the front to the back of the throat. Just as in normal speech, these cords vibrate with air pressure to produce audible speech. However, with spasmodic dysphonia, the brain sends extra-ordinary signals to the muscles in the vocal cords causing the vocal cords to tremble disorderly. Given this setup, the speech can be irregular, distorted and chaotic.


Can you find different types?
Yes, there are different types of spasmodic dysphonia.

Abductor spasmodic dysphonia
This happens to be the most common type of this disease.
Here the vocal cords muscles close and stiffen. This results in sounds becoming difficult to come out. You may find it difficult to say a word, and even when the words manage to emerge, they may cut, and leave you trailing in the middle of a sentence.  It has to be pointed out that you only experience this difficulty when talking in low, modulated tone, not when you laugh or shout.

Adductor spasmodic dysphonia
In this case, the vocal cords open very wide, causing them not to vibrate. The air leaves your lungs freely when you speak. This type of dysphonia makes your voice faint and without power. You can, however, laugh, shout, and cry without feeling the symptom.

Mixed spasmodic dysphonia
Here, the function of the opening and closing muscles of the vocal cords is erratic. This case is the most uncommon and all its symptoms are connected to either the adductor or abductor spasmodic dysphonia.

Symptoms of Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
The common symptom of spasmodic dysphonia usually is an uncontrollable or spasmodic movement of the muscles of the vocal cords. The overall effect is that your speech is labored. Your words are constantly interrupted and you appear to drag them out as you speak.
Too much air is behind your words.

Spasmodic dysphonia begins with seemingly infrequent innocuous symptoms. However, with time it becomes more severe to the extent that your words drag making it more difficult to understand you. The muscle spasms affect every word. Your voice becomes squeaky, produces wrong pitches, strained, and breathy. After what looks like a year the progressive development stops and the symptoms stabilize.

What causes it and who is at risk?
Currently, the knowledge as to the causes and risk factors of spasmodic disphonia is uncertain. It seems there’s an abnormal development in the nervous system of those with the disease, which causes the vocal cords to develop these spasms. In some cases, it seems safe to conclude that spasmodic dysphonia is possibly a form of dystonia. This one itself is a kind of neurological condition which affects the tone a muscle produces.
It may be that the problem is with the brainstem which links the brain and the spinal cord.

Risk factors of Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
Brain diseases that cause degeneration
Family inheritance
Brain that is infected
Being exposed to toxins
Women are at greater risk
Between 30 and 50 years

Diagnosis of Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
You will have to talk to your doctor and intimate him with the symptoms, especially how the spasms affect your voice. With Fiberopticnasolaryngoscopy the doctor will examine your vocal cords. This instrument consists of a lit tube, thin and flexible, which the doctor will guide through your nostril into your throat. The doctor will ask you to speak so he can watch your vocal cords.

Remember that your symptoms are no different from any other voice impairment, which can typically be caused by cancer, infection, or stroke. Therefore, except there’s a fiberopticnasolaryngoscopy performance, your doctor cannot obtain an accurate diagnosis.

Blood and urine tests for the detection of toxins, CT brain scan, MRI brain scan, and DNA testing for gene relationship are typical tests and procedures for the diagnosis of Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia.

What treatment options are available?
The treatments there are for spasmodic dysphonia are only for the relief of symptoms as there are no clinical cure yet for this disease. So many considerations will go into your cure. These are age, the state of your health, the severity of your illness, added to your strength or otherwise of your going through certain procedures. Operating on your throat is capable of permanently damaging it. So how do you feel about the procedure?

You may prefer undertaking therapy for muscle control that may positively improve your voice and speech and breathing. This means you may decide to give up surgery altogether.
In spasmodic dysphonia cases, Botulinum toxin helps to block the signal which the nerve sends to the muscle, thereby checkmating spasms. In any event, the result of this treatment isn’t permanent, because symptoms come back after a period of time. You have to therefore repeatedly take the treatment for improvement. Even surgery to the nerves leading to the vocal cords does not guarantee overall best result surgery.


Homeopathic Treatment of Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
Homeopathy gives relief to the patient and normalizes the voice. This is because the treatment it gives pays attention to the overall need of the person as a human being. It restores balance and vitality to the individual. It also improves the person’s immune system and activates all the body functions. It naturally wipes out the root cause of the ailment and makes the muscles and the nerves perform normally. Sponga, aconte, sambuscus N, and moschus are the prevailing homeopathic medicines used for abductor spasmodic dysphonia.


 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Patient's Feedback

For Safe Natural Holistic Treatment, contact or visit:

Ethos Healthcare
Email : contactethos@gmail.com
Phone: +91-11-26164016, 46026700
Mobile / Whatsapp: +91-9810155920
Website:
www.ethosbodyandmindclinic.com

and

www.ethoshealthcare.com

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No comments:

Post a Comment