AI Article Synopsis

  • * Diagnosis typically relies on laryngoscopy, but dynamic CT larynx shows promise as a quicker, noninvasive method; treatment generally involves speech therapy and emerging options like botulinum toxin injections.
  • * There is a pressing need for randomized trials to clarify treatment effectiveness, validate new diagnostic tools, and establish consistent care standards, with multidisciplinary clinics showing potential for improved management.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Vocal cord dysfunction/inducible laryngeal obstruction (VCD/ILO) is an important medical condition but understanding of the condition is imperfect. It occurs in healthy people but often co-exists with asthma. Models of VCD/ILO pathophysiology highlight predisposing factors rather than specific mechanisms and disease expression varies between people, which is seldom appreciated. Diagnosis is often delayed, and the treatment is not evidence based.

Areas Covered: A unified pathophysiological model and disease phenotypes have been proposed. Diagnosis is conventionally made by laryngoscopy during inspiration with vocal cord narrowing >50% Recently, dynamic CT larynx was shown to have high specificity (>80%) with potential as a noninvasive, swift, and quantifiable diagnostic modality. Treatment entails laryngeal retraining with speech pathology intervention and experimental therapies such as botulinum toxin injection. Multidisciplinary team (MDT) clinics are a novel innovation with demonstrated benefits including accurate diagnosis, selection of appropriate treatment, and reductions in oral corticosteroid exposure.

Expert Opinion: Delayed diagnosis of VCD/ILO is pervasive, often leading to detrimental treatments. Phenotypes require validation and CT larynx can reduce the necessity for laryngoscopy, thereby fast-tracking diagnosis. MDT clinics can optimize management. Randomized controlled trials are essential to validate speech pathology intervention and other treatment modalities and to establish international standards of care.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17476348.2023.2215434DOI Listing

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