A case study is reported of a subject who has used inspiratory speech (IS) for 6 years as a means of overcoming the communication problems of long-standing adductor spastic dysphonia (ASD). The subject was studied to confirm his use of IS, determine the mechanisms of its production, investigate its effects on ventilatory gas exchange, and confirm that it was perceptually preferable to ASD expiratory speech (ES). Results showed that the production and control of a high laryngeal resistance to airflow were necessary for usable IS. Voice quality was quantitatively and perceptually poor; however, the improved fluency and absence of phonatory spasm made IS the preferred speaking mode for both the listener and the speaker. Transcutaneous measurements of the partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the subject's blood were made during extended speaking periods. These measurements indicated that ventilation was unchanged during IS, and that ventilation during ES was similar to the "hyperventilation" state of normal speakers. The reasons for the absence of phonatory spasm during IS are discussed, and the possibility of its use as a noninvasive management option for other ASD sufferers is addressed.
Observations of inappropriate rate increase in five patients with minute ventilation rate responsive implanted pacemakers (Telectronics Meta) are reported. Pacing rate increases were observed immediately upon connection of the resting patients to two brands of widely used cardiac monitors, and one commonly used echocardiograph. In some circumstances, the rate increase remained until monitor disconnection; in others the rate increase was transient, lasting and 20 seconds. A hardware thoracic resistance variation simulator was constructed and connected to one of the pacemakers to test sensitivity to rate modifying interference from external sources. This demonstrated that the sensitivity to interference is dependent upon the frequency of the interfering signal and is highest in the range 10-60 kHz, that peak currents as low as 10 microA can cause maximum rate increase, and that the signals injected into patients by several cardiac monitors, for purposes of lead-off detection or respiratory monitoring, fall into the frequency range at which the pacemaker is most susceptible to interference.
The errors involved in the use of an analog pitch period detector and a microcomputer to measure jitter and shimmer were explored. A simulation study using sinusoidal waveforms was conducted to ascertain the nature of temporal errors occurring in sampled signal frequency perturbation studies. The results indicate that even for jitter free signals errors can occur in frequency perturbation measurements, that the magnitude of these errors can be as high as actual frequency perturbations occurring in steady human vowels, and that the magnitude of the errors is not a function of fundamental frequency hut of the remainder of the ratio of signal period to sample period.
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