Taking a Closer Look at Laryngectomy Recovery and Voice Rehabilitation
Your voice is important, it’s how you communicate and express your thoughts and feelings, so losing it after a total laryngectomy can be upsetting. Thankfully, there are methods available for you to regain your voice.
We have put together this guide so you can have a better understanding of how to rehabilitate your voice effectively.
It’s hard for me to put into words what it means to regain my voice. I can be myself. I can do what I’ve always done. I can live. And that’s what it means to me. – Joe, USA.
A total laryngectomy is the removal of the voice box or larynx which includes your vocal cords, so you will not be able to speak as you did before surgery. There are several ways to regain your voice after a laryngectomy, such as speaking with a voice prosthesis ‘tracheoesophageal’ speech and speaking with an electrolarynx or oesophageal voice (1).
In a word, different. As you will no longer have vocal cords, you will have to learn tracheoesophageal speech to communicate. A voice prosthesis is a small silicone device that sits between the oesophagus ‘food pipe’ and trachea ‘wind pipe’. By blocking your stoma with your finger, you can redirect air from your lungs through the voice prosthesis and up into your mouth (1). Using this technique can give you a more natural voice quality compared to other methods (1, 2).
After the voice prosthesis insertion, you may have to wait a few weeks for your throat to heal. You won’t be able to eat or speak during this time. Once your throat has healed, you can begin speech therapy and start learning how to use your voice prosthesis. It may take weeks or even months to learn how to use your new voice effectively. Have a pen and paper or an iPad handy during this time to help convey your thoughts and ideas effectively. During this time, you can also use an Electrolarynx to communicate.
The Provox Vega voice prosthesis is designed for better voice quality and reduced speaking effort. It is also easy and effective to clean and maintain*.
*Data on file.
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1 Tang CG, Sinclair CF. Voice Restoration After Total Laryngectomy. Otolaryngol Clin North Am. 2015;48(4):687-702.
2 van Sluis KE, van der Molen L, van Son R, Hilgers FJM, Bhairosing PA, van den Brekel MWM. Objective and subjective voice outcomes after total laryngectomy: a systematic review. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol. 2018;275(1):11-26.
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