Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation

An in-house 3D fluid–structure–acoustic interaction numerical solver was employed to investigate the effect of subglottic stenosis (SGS) on dynamics of glottal flow, vocal fold vibration and acoustics during voice production. The investigation focused on two SGS properties, including severity define...

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Main Authors: Dariush Bodaghi, Qian Xue, Xudong Zheng, Scott Thomson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/3/1221
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spelling doaj-3048750d510746839eb396df94ba70552021-01-30T00:00:22ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-01-01111221122110.3390/app11031221Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction SimulationDariush Bodaghi0Qian Xue1Xudong Zheng2Scott Thomson3Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04473, USADepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04473, USADepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04473, USADepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USAAn in-house 3D fluid–structure–acoustic interaction numerical solver was employed to investigate the effect of subglottic stenosis (SGS) on dynamics of glottal flow, vocal fold vibration and acoustics during voice production. The investigation focused on two SGS properties, including severity defined as the percentage of area reduction and location. The results show that SGS affects voice production only when its severity is beyond a threshold, which is at 75% for the glottal flow rate and acoustics, and at 90% for the vocal fold vibrations. Beyond the threshold, the flow rate, vocal fold vibration amplitude and vocal efficiency decrease rapidly with SGS severity, while the skewness quotient, vibration frequency, signal-to-noise ratio and vocal intensity decrease slightly, and the open quotient increases slightly. Changing the location of SGS shows no effect on the dynamics. Further analysis reveals that the effect of SGS on the dynamics is primarily due to its effect on the flow resistance in the entire airway, which is found to be related to the area ratio of glottis to SGS. Below the SGS severity of 75%, which corresponds to an area ratio of glottis to SGS of 0.1, changing the SGS severity only causes very small changes in the area ratio; therefore, its effect on the flow resistance and dynamics is very small. Beyond the SGS severity of 75%, increasing the SGS severity, leads to rapid increases of the area ratio, resulting in rapid changes in the flow resistance and dynamics.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/3/1221subglottic stenosisvocal foldvoice productionfluid–structure–acoustic interactionhydrodynamic/acoustics splitting methodlinearized perturbed compressible equation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dariush Bodaghi
Qian Xue
Xudong Zheng
Scott Thomson
spellingShingle Dariush Bodaghi
Qian Xue
Xudong Zheng
Scott Thomson
Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation
Applied Sciences
subglottic stenosis
vocal fold
voice production
fluid–structure–acoustic interaction
hydrodynamic/acoustics splitting method
linearized perturbed compressible equation
author_facet Dariush Bodaghi
Qian Xue
Xudong Zheng
Scott Thomson
author_sort Dariush Bodaghi
title Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation
title_short Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation
title_full Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation
title_fullStr Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Subglottic Stenosis on Vocal Fold Vibration and Voice Production Using Fluid–Structure–Acoustics Interaction Simulation
title_sort effect of subglottic stenosis on vocal fold vibration and voice production using fluid–structure–acoustics interaction simulation
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-01-01
description An in-house 3D fluid–structure–acoustic interaction numerical solver was employed to investigate the effect of subglottic stenosis (SGS) on dynamics of glottal flow, vocal fold vibration and acoustics during voice production. The investigation focused on two SGS properties, including severity defined as the percentage of area reduction and location. The results show that SGS affects voice production only when its severity is beyond a threshold, which is at 75% for the glottal flow rate and acoustics, and at 90% for the vocal fold vibrations. Beyond the threshold, the flow rate, vocal fold vibration amplitude and vocal efficiency decrease rapidly with SGS severity, while the skewness quotient, vibration frequency, signal-to-noise ratio and vocal intensity decrease slightly, and the open quotient increases slightly. Changing the location of SGS shows no effect on the dynamics. Further analysis reveals that the effect of SGS on the dynamics is primarily due to its effect on the flow resistance in the entire airway, which is found to be related to the area ratio of glottis to SGS. Below the SGS severity of 75%, which corresponds to an area ratio of glottis to SGS of 0.1, changing the SGS severity only causes very small changes in the area ratio; therefore, its effect on the flow resistance and dynamics is very small. Beyond the SGS severity of 75%, increasing the SGS severity, leads to rapid increases of the area ratio, resulting in rapid changes in the flow resistance and dynamics.
topic subglottic stenosis
vocal fold
voice production
fluid–structure–acoustic interaction
hydrodynamic/acoustics splitting method
linearized perturbed compressible equation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/3/1221
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