Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index

Objectives/Hypothesis: Instrumental measures of voice allow practitioners to assess the severity of voice disorders and objectively measure treatment outcomes. Instrumental measures should be calculated on both sustained vowel and connected speech samples to ensure ecological validity. However, ther...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reynolds, Mary, Buckland, A., Bailey, J., Lipscombe, J., Nathan, E., Vijayasekaran, S., Kelly, R., Maryn, Y., French, N.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59295
_version_ 1848760440301027328
author Reynolds, Mary
Buckland, A.
Bailey, J.
Lipscombe, J.
Nathan, E.
Vijayasekaran, S.
Kelly, R.
Maryn, Y.
French, N.
author_facet Reynolds, Mary
Buckland, A.
Bailey, J.
Lipscombe, J.
Nathan, E.
Vijayasekaran, S.
Kelly, R.
Maryn, Y.
French, N.
author_sort Reynolds, Mary
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives/Hypothesis: Instrumental measures of voice allow practitioners to assess the severity of voice disorders and objectively measure treatment outcomes. Instrumental measures should be calculated on both sustained vowel and connected speech samples to ensure ecological validity. However, there is a lack of appropriate, validated acoustic measurements for use in the pediatric population. The Acoustic Voice Quality Index (AVQI) is a multivariate acoustic measure of dysphonia that has been found to be reliable, valid, and have diagnostic accuracy and response to change in an adult population. This study aimed to evaluate the AVQI in a pediatric population. Study Design: This study was a prospective observational study of a sample of dysphonic and normophonic children. Methods: Sixty-seven preterm participants (born at less than 25 weeks gestation) aged between 6 and 15 years were recruited. Participants were excluded because of either inability to comply with task requirements or other speech-related factors that affected acoustic measurement. Forty normophonic term-born participants aged between 5 and 15 years were also recruited. AVQI analysis was conducted on a prolonged vowel sample and a sample of continuous speech. Results: The AVQI was found to have diagnostic accuracy and specificity in this population of children with and without dysphonia. It was moderately correlated with ratings of severity on the GRBAS (overall grade of hoarseness (G), roughness (R), breathiness (B), aesthenicity (A), and strain (S)), a subjective rating scale. The threshold for pathology of this sample of 3.46 showed strong sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy, with good-to-excellent likelihood ratios. Conclusions: This study found that the AVQI has diagnostic accuracy in a pediatric population, suggesting that it is an appropriate assessment tool to determine the presence and severity of pediatric voice disorders.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:15:49Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-59295
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:15:49Z
publishDate 2012
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-592952018-03-05T06:54:07Z Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index Reynolds, Mary Buckland, A. Bailey, J. Lipscombe, J. Nathan, E. Vijayasekaran, S. Kelly, R. Maryn, Y. French, N. Objectives/Hypothesis: Instrumental measures of voice allow practitioners to assess the severity of voice disorders and objectively measure treatment outcomes. Instrumental measures should be calculated on both sustained vowel and connected speech samples to ensure ecological validity. However, there is a lack of appropriate, validated acoustic measurements for use in the pediatric population. The Acoustic Voice Quality Index (AVQI) is a multivariate acoustic measure of dysphonia that has been found to be reliable, valid, and have diagnostic accuracy and response to change in an adult population. This study aimed to evaluate the AVQI in a pediatric population. Study Design: This study was a prospective observational study of a sample of dysphonic and normophonic children. Methods: Sixty-seven preterm participants (born at less than 25 weeks gestation) aged between 6 and 15 years were recruited. Participants were excluded because of either inability to comply with task requirements or other speech-related factors that affected acoustic measurement. Forty normophonic term-born participants aged between 5 and 15 years were also recruited. AVQI analysis was conducted on a prolonged vowel sample and a sample of continuous speech. Results: The AVQI was found to have diagnostic accuracy and specificity in this population of children with and without dysphonia. It was moderately correlated with ratings of severity on the GRBAS (overall grade of hoarseness (G), roughness (R), breathiness (B), aesthenicity (A), and strain (S)), a subjective rating scale. The threshold for pathology of this sample of 3.46 showed strong sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy, with good-to-excellent likelihood ratios. Conclusions: This study found that the AVQI has diagnostic accuracy in a pediatric population, suggesting that it is an appropriate assessment tool to determine the presence and severity of pediatric voice disorders. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59295 10.1016/j.jvoice.2012.02.002 restricted
spellingShingle Reynolds, Mary
Buckland, A.
Bailey, J.
Lipscombe, J.
Nathan, E.
Vijayasekaran, S.
Kelly, R.
Maryn, Y.
French, N.
Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
title Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
title_full Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
title_fullStr Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
title_full_unstemmed Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
title_short Objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
title_sort objective assessment of pediatric voice disorders with the acoustic voice quality index
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59295