Art and science: impact of semioccluded vocal tract exercises and choral singing on quality of life in subjects with congenital GH deficiency

Bruna M R de Andrade,Eugenia H O Valença,Roberto Salvatori,Luiz A Oliveira,Anita H O Souza,Alaíde H A Oliveira,Mario C P Oliveira,Enaldo V Melo,Susana de Carvalho,Neuza J Sales,Gisane C Monteiro, José Marcel de Lima, Marcos Felipe Harder Annunziato, Guilherme Daniel Breternitz Mannis, Lucas E de A Souza, Yasmin D Goes, Thayza S Carvalho, Celiane de Farias,Michela P Dos Santos, Gabriela P F Cardoso, Carla S Pereira Sousa, Julia Rodrigues Santana, Ester Almeida Sales, Jeferson Sampaio d'Avila,Manuel H Aguiar-Oliveira

ARCHIVES OF ENDOCRINOLOGY METABOLISM(2022)

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Abstract
Objectives: Currently, not much is known about the interactions between voice and growth hormone (GH). We have described large kindred with isolated GH deficiency (IGHD) due to a GHRH receptor mutation, resulting in severe short stature and high-pitched voice. These IGHD individuals have little interest in GH treatment, as they consider themselves "short long-lived people", rather than patients. Interestingly, they report normal general quality of life, but they rate their Voice-Related Quality of Life (V-RQOL) as low. Here, we assessed the social and auditory-perceptual impacts of artistic-intervention voice therapy with semioccluded vocal tract exercises (SOVTE) and choral singing, on their voices. Material and methods: Seventeen GH-naive adult IGHD individuals were enrolled in a single-arm interventional pre-post study with 13 weekly sessions of choir singing over 90 days. Outcome measures were V-RQOL scores, self-assessment of voice, and auditory-perceptual analysis (GRBAS scale, G: grade of the severity of dysphonia; R: roughness; B: breathiness; A: asthenia; and S: strain). Results: Marked improvements in total (p = 0.0001), physical (p = 0.0002), and socioemotional (p = 0.0001) V-RQOL scores and in self-assessment of voice (p = 0.004) were found. The general grades of vocal deviation (p = 0.0001), roughness (p = 0.0001), breathiness (p = 0.0001) and strain (p = 0.0001) exhibited accentuated reductions. Conclusions: Voice therapy with semioccluded vocal tract exercises and choral training improved social impact and perceptual voice assessments in IGHD subjects and markedly improved their voice-related quality of life. This is particularly important in a setting where GH replacement therapy is not widely accepted.
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Key words
Growth Hormone, voice, singing, quality of life, auditory-perception analysis
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