Title: Videonasopharyngoscopy as an instrument for visual biofeedback during speech in cleft palate patients
Abstract: Videonasopharyngoscopy was used as an instrument for visual biofeedback during speech in cleft palate patients. Seventeen cleft palate patients were randomly selected for the study. All patients showed velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI), compensatory articulation (CA) and negative movement of lateral pharyngeal walls (NMLPW) during speech. Nine patients received speech therapy for correcting CA. Eight patients received speech therapy and underwent videonasopharyngoscopy as an instrument for visual biofeedback of the velopharyngeal sphincter. After 12 weeks, NMLPW was modified in the patients receiving speech therapy and visual biofeedback. In contrast, NMLPW was still present in eight out of nine patients receiving only speech therapy. These patients received visual biofeedback and NMLPW was corrected in all cases. After six months, all 17 patients had corrected CA during isolated speech. All patients received a tailor-made pharyngeal flap. VPI was completely corrected in 15 cases. In the two cases in which VPI was still present postoperatively, the size of the defect at the velopharyngeal sphincter had been significantly reduced. In these two patients, visual biofeedback was used postoperatively for increasing lateral pharyngeal walls (LPW) motion towards the borders of the flap. After 18 months since the onset of speech therapy all the patients had normal nasal resonance and normal articulation during connected speech.
Publication Year: 1997
Publication Date: 1997-09-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 32
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