Effects of a Vocally Fatiguing Task and Systemic Hydration on Men's Voices☆
Accepted 11 June 2002.
Abstract
Summary: Voice disorders, specifically vocal fatigue, are more commonly reported by women than by men. Previously, 4 women with normal untrained voices read loudly for 2 hours in an attempt to fatigue the voice. Vocal function deteriorated, as indicated by increases in phonation threshold pressure (PTP) and self-perceived phonatory effort. The increase in PTP was delayed or attenuated to some degree in 3 of the women when they drank ample amounts of water before the experiment. The current study examined the same vocal-loading task and water-drinking condition in 4 vocally normal men. PTP increased after the loud-reading task. Although 2 of the men appeared to benefit from increased systemic hydration (PTP increased more when they were underhydrated than well-hydrated), the other 2 men's data changed in the opposite direction. Phonatory effort correlated well with PTP; this varied across subject and pitch. Laryngeal endoscopy revealed an anterior glottal gap in two men after the loud-reading task. Amplitude of vocal fold vibration was judged to be reduced after the loud-reading task in three subjects when underhydrated and one subject when well hydrated. The high between-subject variability prohibits a conclusion that drinking water is beneficial to vocal function in men, but all subjects studied to date demonstrated detrimental vocal effects of prolonged loud talking.
Department of Communication Disorders, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Nancy Pearl Solomon, PhD, CCC-SLP, Research Speech Pathologist, Army Audiology & Speech Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, 6900 Georgia Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20307-5001, USA
☆ Presented at the Voice Foundation's 30th Annual Symposium: Care of the Professional Voice, June 2001, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.