Speech rehabilitation during the first year after total laryngectomy.

Susanne Singer; Dorit Wollbrück; Andreas Dietz; Juliane Schock; Friedemann Pabst; Hans-Joachim Vogel; Jens Oeken; Annett Sandner; Sven Koscielny; Karl Hormes; +6 more... Kerstin Breitenstein; Heike Richter; Andreas Deckelmann; Sarah Cook ORCID logo; Michael Fuchs; Sylvia Meuret; (2012) Speech rehabilitation during the first year after total laryngectomy. Head & neck, 35 (11). pp. 1583-1590. ISSN 1043-3074 DOI: 10.1002/hed.23183
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BACKGROUND: Gaining a new voice is one of the major aims after total laryngectomy. The objective of this study was to describe the process and results of speech rehabilitation during the first year after surgery. METHODS: Speech intelligibility was measured 6 months (n = 273) and 1 year (n = 225) after total laryngectomy. RESULTS: Objective (23.4 to 47.5 points, p < .0001) and subjective (51.6 to 64.7 points, p < .0001) speech intelligibility improved between 6 months and 1 year after total laryngectomy. Patients who used tracheoesophageal puncture (TEP) had the best results in speech intelligibility 6 months and 1 year after total laryngectomy. In all, 12% of the patients who used TEP initially no longer used it 1 year later. Patients who had received rehabilitation had better objective speech intelligibility than those who did not. CONCLUSIONS: Speech improves considerably between 6 months and 1 year after total laryngectomy. Nonattendance of rehabilitation is associated with a worse functional outcome in speech rehabilitation.

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