Saiumaeswar Yogakanthi’s research while affiliated with Department of Health Victoria and other places

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Publications (1)


Unilateral vocal cord adductor weakness: an atypical manifestation of motor neurone disease
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2021

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143 Reads

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6 Citations

Saiumaeswar Yogakanthi

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Christine Wools

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Susan Mathers

Background Bulbar involvement is a recognised feature of motor neuron disease/amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (MND/ALS), both as a presenting complaint and as a consequence of advancing disease. Hoarseness and dysphonia have been associated with vocal cord abductor weakness. This is usually bilateral and has also been reported as the presenting clinical feature in a handful of patients with superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) gene mutations. Presentation with an isolated, unilateral vocal cord adductor weakness, however, is atypical and rare. Case In this report, we detail the case of a 38-year-old woman with dysphonia and a family history of an SOD1 mutation. Neurological features remained confined to the territory of the left vagus nerve for the next 12 months, before a more rapid rate of disease dissemination and progression. Conclusions This case highlights the importance of recognition of vocal cord palsy as an early manifestation of MND/ALS and the critical need for monitoring to recognise potential disease progression.

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Citations (1)


... In particular, patients with MSA-P can develop VFMI earlier than patients with MSA-C because the spontaneous activity of intrinsic laryngeal muscles in patients with MSA-P can lead to an earlier onset of VFMI [9]. There are two plausible hypotheses for the pathophysiology of VFMI: (1) a severe loss of neurons in the nucleus ambiguus results in hypoactivity and neurogenic atrophy of the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle, which is the sole laryngeal abductor muscle, or (2) dystonia is induced by hyperactivity of the laryngeal adductor muscles [55,56] (Figure 3). ...

Reference:

Vocal Fold Motion Impairment in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Unilateral vocal cord adductor weakness: an atypical manifestation of motor neurone disease