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J Appl Physiol (June 2, 2005). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00402.2004
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Submitted on April 14, 2004
Accepted on May 30, 2005

Laryngeal Muscle Responses to Mechanical Displacement of the Thyroid Cartilage in Humans

Torrey M.J. Loucks1*, Christopher J. Poletto1, Keith G. Saxon1, and Christy L. Ludlow1

1 Laryngeal and Speech Section, National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, MD, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: louckst{at}ninds.nih.gov.

Speakers may use laryngeal sensory feedback to adjust vocal fold tension and length prior to initiating voice. The mechanism for accurately initiating voice at an intended pitch is unknown given the absence of laryngeal muscle spindles in animals and conflicting findings regarding their existence in humans. Previous reports of rapid changes in voice fundamental frequency following thyroid cartilage displacement suggest that changes in vocal fold length modulate laryngeal muscle contraction in humans. We tested the hypothesis that voice changes resulting from mechanical perturbation are due to rapid responses in the intrinsic laryngeal muscles. Hooked wire electrodes were used to record from the thyroarytenoid, cricothyroid, and sternothyroid muscles along with surface electrodes on the skin overlying the thyroid cartilage in ten normal adults. Servomotor displacements produced consistent changes in the subjects vocal fundamental frequency at 70-80 ms demonstrating changes in the vocal fold length and tension. No simultaneous electromyographic responses occurred in the thyroarytenoid or cricothyroid muscles in any subjects. Instead, short-latency responses at 25-40 ms following stimulus onset occurred in the sternothyroid muscles simultaneous with responses in the surface recordings. The sternothyroid responses may modulate long-latency changes in voice fundamental frequency (~150 ms). The absence of intrinsic laryngeal muscles responses is consistent with a lack of spindles in these muscles. Our results suggest that other sensory receptors, such as mucosal mechanoreceptors, provide feedback for voice control.




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