Dysphonia
Background
- Dysphonia is an abnormality of phonation (hoarseness, voice change, or difficulty producing voice)[1]
- The primary EM concern is whether dysphonia indicates potential airway compromise
- Acute onset dysphonia with dyspnea, stridor, or swallowing difficulty is an airway emergency
- Evaluate all patients with dysphonia for signs of upper airway obstruction before focusing on underlying diagnosis
- New-onset "hot potato voice" (muffled voice) suggests supraglottic process (peritonsillar abscess, epiglottitis, Ludwig's angina)
Clinical Features
History
- Onset: acute (hours) vs. subacute (days-weeks) vs. chronic (months)
- Associated symptoms: dyspnea, stridor, dysphagia, odynophagia, drooling, cough, fever
- Preceding events: intubation, surgery, trauma, illness, caustic exposure
- Voice use (singer, teacher — overuse)
- Smoking history (laryngeal cancer)
- Medication review (ACE inhibitors, inhaled corticosteroids)
- Neurologic symptoms (weakness, sensory changes, diplopia)
Physical Exam
- Assess airway first: listen for stridor, evaluate respiratory effort
- Oropharyngeal exam: peritonsillar swelling, floor of mouth elevation (Ludwig's angina), tongue swelling
- Neck: tracheal deviation, subcutaneous emphysema, mass, thyroid enlargement
- Cranial nerve exam (CN IX, X, XII)
- Voice quality: hoarse (vocal cord), muffled/"hot potato" (supraglottic), breathy (vocal cord paresis)
Red Flags
- Stridor or respiratory distress → imminent airway compromise
- Drooling, inability to swallow secretions → severe supraglottic process
- Acute onset after trauma → laryngeal injury
- Subcutaneous emphysema → tracheal or laryngeal disruption
- Rapidly progressive → angioedema, epiglottitis
- Associated neurologic deficits → stroke (lateral medullary), myasthenia gravis, botulism
Differential Diagnosis
Emergent/Urgent Causes
- Tracheal injury, laryngeal airway trauma, strangulation
- Posterior sternoclavicular dislocation (compressing recurrent laryngeal nerve)
- Iatrogenic recurrent laryngeal nerve injury: ENT, thyroid, or thoracic surgery; vagal nerve stimulator complication
- Foreign body aspiration
- Caustic ingestion, smoke inhalation injury
- Angioedema
- Epiglottitis, diphtheria
- Ludwig's angina, peritonsillar abscess, retropharyngeal abscess
- Aortic dissection (left recurrent laryngeal nerve compression)
- Stroke (lateral medullary infarction — Wallenberg syndrome)
- Botulism
- Myasthenia gravis
- Acute flaccid myelitis
Non-Emergent Causes
- Laryngitis (most common overall cause — viral)
- GERD / laryngopharyngeal reflux
- Post-intubation or post-laryngeal mask airway
- Voice overuse/misuse
- Vocal cord nodules or polyps
- Laryngeal cancer (chronic smoker with progressive hoarseness)
- Hypothyroidism / myxedema of vocal cords
- Inhaled corticosteroid use (candidal laryngitis)
- Note: voice may sound abnormal to you but be completely normal for that patient
Evaluation
Immediate
- Assess airway stability — if concerning, prepare for difficult airway management
- Do not agitate patient if concern for supraglottic pathology (especially in children)
Workup
- Testing depends on suspected underlying cause based on history and exam:
- Soft tissue lateral neck X-ray: prevertebral widening (retropharyngeal abscess), epiglottic swelling (thumbprint sign)
- CT neck with contrast: abscess, mass, trauma
- CT angiography: if aortic dissection or vascular cause suspected
- CT head/MRI brain: if stroke or intracranial pathology suspected
- Nasopharyngoscopy / fiberoptic laryngoscopy: direct visualization of vocal cords (if available and patient is stable)
Laboratory
- Generally guided by suspected diagnosis
- CBC, blood cultures if infectious cause suspected
- Wound cultures if neck trauma with contamination
- Consider TSH for chronic hoarseness without clear cause
Management
Airway Management
- If airway compromise: secure airway using intubation with backup surgical airway plan
- Prepare for difficult airway — have smaller ETT sizes available
- Call ENT and anesthesia early for anticipated difficult airway
- See Difficult Airway Algorithm
Condition-Specific
- Angioedema: epinephrine, antihistamines; for ACE inhibitor-induced consider icatibant
- Epiglottitis: IV antibiotics, airway management in controlled setting
- Peritonsillar abscess: drainage, IV antibiotics
- Ludwig's angina: IV antibiotics, ENT consultation for possible surgical drainage
- Laryngeal trauma: ENT consultation, may require surgical repair
- Laryngitis: supportive care (voice rest, hydration, humidified air)
- Post-intubation: usually self-limited; ENT follow-up if persistent >2 weeks
- Stroke: activate stroke protocol
Disposition
Admit
- Any patient with airway compromise or risk of progressive obstruction
- Deep space neck infections requiring IV antibiotics and monitoring
- Laryngeal trauma
- Stroke with dysphonia
- Botulism or myasthenia gravis (risk of respiratory failure)
Discharge
- Laryngitis (viral): voice rest, hydration, follow-up if no improvement in 2-3 weeks
- Mild post-intubation dysphonia: ENT follow-up if persistent
- Return precautions: difficulty breathing, worsening voice changes, inability to swallow, drooling, fever
- Any hoarseness lasting >2-3 weeks should have ENT evaluation (rule out malignancy)
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Stachler RJ, et al. Clinical Practice Guideline: Hoarseness (Dysphonia) (Update). Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018 Mar;158(1_suppl):S1-S42. PMID 29494321
