dysphonia in English

noun
1
difficulty in speaking due to a physical disorder of the mouth, tongue, throat, or vocal cords.
This is a multisystem condition causing complications such as anxiety, fatigue, insomnia, myalgia, dysphonia , and urinary incontinence.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "dysphonia" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dysphonia", or refer to the context using the word "dysphonia" in the English Dictionary.

1. We did not notice any open rhinolalia, dysphagia and dysphonia.

2. Serious when can accompany have fiction, continuously movement and dysphonia .

3. The gender difference of autism lies in behavior disorder, dysphonia and intellectual characteristics.

4. Spasmodic dysphonia is a rare neurological disease that Causes hoarseness and can also affect breathing

5. If using your voice is difficult, then you know what dysphonia is.

6. Psychogenic voice disorder (PVD) (also known as conversion dysphonia, psychological functional dysphonia, phononeurosis, or hysteric Aphonia/dysphonia) is a vocal behavioral disorder that is not a structural or neurological laryngeal disorder.1, 2 In general, patients with PVDs are observed to have an acute onset, and most of them had stress-related problems in the past

7. Background: The pathophysiology of adductor spasmodic dysphonia (Adsd), like other focal dystonias, is largely unknown

8. The current data showed the possibility that a novel index reflecting both acoustic and psychometric correlates of auditory-perceptual estimates for dysphonia severity could be suggested and possibly named as the "Acoustic Psychometric Severity Index of Dysphonia (Apsid)." Further studies pertaining …

9. Laozhang is close already 70 years old, latter cough is frequent, and appear gradually cracked, dysphonia .

10. Abductor spasmodic dysphonia occurs in about 15% of patients and manifests with breathy breaks in speech, especially with consonants

11. Objective To compare the reliability of acoustic measure and the electroglottograph in evaluation of the voice dysphonia.

12. For those affected by dysphonia, the voice can be described as hoarse, rough, raspy, strained, weak, Breathy or gravely

13. Remain vigilant for systemic effects that may follow administration of botulinum toxins, including dysphagia, dysphonia , weakness, dyspnea, or respiratory distress.

14. Aphonia or dysphonia, with sore throat in persons who speak in public and sing. Voice changeable, varying in tone from one moment to another

15. A surprisingly low seropositivity rate of anti-acetylcholine-receptor antibodies (1/ and anti-MuSK (Muscle Specific Kinase) antibodies (0/ were found in these dysphonia MG patients.

16. Voice tremor can be isolated or associated with tremor of other body parts, and it must be distinguished from spasmodic dysphonia , a dystonic disorder of the larynx.

17. In medical terminology it is considered a generic term used to describe a vocal pathologies like dysphonia, Aphonia, diplophonia, odynophonia and vocal fatigue.1 Functional Aphonia

18. Lesion of nucleus Ambiguus results in atrophy (lower motor neuron) and paralysis of innervated muscles, producing nasal speech, dysphagia, dysphonia, and deviation of the uvula toward the CONTRA

19. Adsd: Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia: Adsd: Advanced Distributed Systems Design: Adsd: Air Defense Systems Directorate (US DoD) Adsd: Autosomal Dominant Striatal Degeneration: Adsd: Active Duty Start Date: Adsd: Australian Defence Signals Directorate (Department of Defence Intelligence and Security; Australia) Adsd: Active Directory Software

20. Objective: The purposes of this study were to determine (a) cortical excitability differences between Adsd, muscle tension dysphonia (MTD), and healthy controls; (b) distribution of potential differences in cranial or skeletal muscle; and (c) if cortical excitability measures