Objectives/Hypothesis: To describe the acoustic characteristics of voice in
individuals with motor speech disorders after traumatic brain injury (TBI)
, Study Design: Prospective study of 100 individuals with TBI based on cons
ecutive referrals for motor speech evaluations. Methods: Subjects were audi
o tape-recorded while producing sustained vowels and single word and senten
ce intelligibility tests. Laryngeal airway resistance was estimated, and vo
ice quality was rated perceptually. Results: None of the subjects evidenced
vocal parameters within normal limits. The most frequently occurring abnor
mal parameter across subjects was amplitude perturbation, followed by voice
turbulence index. Twenty-three percent of subjects evidenced deviation in
all five parameters measured. The perceptual ratings of breathiness were si
gnificantly correlated with both the amplitude perturbation quotient and th
e noise-to-harmonics ratio. Conclusions: Vocal quality deviation is common
in motor speech disorders after TBI and mag impact intelligibility.