Fabiana Zambon
Federal University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Fabiana Zambon.
Journal of Voice | 2012
Mara Behlau; Fabiana Zambon; Ana Cláudia Guerrieri; Nelson Roy
PURPOSE This epidemiological study compared the frequency and adverse effects of voice disorders in Brazilian teachers and nonteachers. METHODS A standardized interview/questionnaire was administered to 3,265 participants; 1,651 teachers; and 1,614 nonteachers recruited from all 27 Brazilian states. RESULTS Prevalence of reporting a current voice disorder was 11.6% for teachers and 7.5% for nonteachers, respectively (χ2(1)=16.1, P<0.001). Sixty-three percent of teachers and 35.8% of nonteachers reported having experienced a voice problem at some point during their lifetime (χ2(1)=246.6, P<0.001). Teachers reported a higher number of current (3.7) and past (3.6) voice symptoms as compared with nonteachers (1.7 current, 2.3 past) and more often attributed these symptoms to their occupation (P<0.001). Teachers, as compared with nonteachers (1) more frequently reported that their voice limited their ability to do certain tasks within their current occupation (29.9% of teachers vs 5.4% of nonteachers; P<0.001); (2) experienced more voice-related absenteeism over the past year (12.1% of teachers missed 5 or more days of work vs 2.4% of nonteachers; P<0.001); and (3) more often considered changing occupations in the future because of voice problems (16.7% of teachers vs 0.9% of nonteachers; P<0.001). The magnitude of voice-related dysfunction among teachers was similar across Brazilian states, and regional characteristics did not appear to significantly influence the results. CONCLUSION This large epidemiological study comparing teachers and nonteachers confirms that teaching at school is a high-risk occupation for developing voice disorders. These voice disorders contribute to reduced job performance, attendance, and force many Brazilian teachers to consider changing occupations in the future because of their voice.
Journal of Voice | 2013
Sabrina Mazzer Paes; Fabiana Zambon; Rosiane Yamasaki; Susanna Simberg; Mara Behlau
OBJECTIVE To investigate the immediate effects of the Finnish resonance tube method for teachers with behavioral dysphonia. METHODS Twenty-five female teachers (m=39.9 years of age) with at least a 5-year history of dysphonia were included. Additional inclusion criteria were the diagnosis of chronic behavioral dysphonia with an indication for speech therapy and the absence of any prior speech therapy. Subjects produced three sets of 10 tokens of sustained phonation with a 1-minute rest interval between tokens into a 27-cm glass tube immersed in at least 2 cm of water. Voice samples were recorded before and after these sets. The effects of these exercises were evaluated by self-assessment, auditory perceptual analysis, and acoustic evaluation involving extraction of fundamental frequency and visual spectrographic analysis. RESULTS Sixty-eight percent of the teachers reported increased phonatory comfort and 52% reported improved voice quality after performing the exercises. Perceptual analysis indicated improved voice quality in the samples of counting numbers, confirmed by decreased instability, subharmonics, noise in high frequencies, and the tendency for reduced low frequency noise on spectrographic evaluation. Additionally, mean fundamental frequency decreased. CONCLUSION The Finnish resonance tube method increased phonatory comfort and vocal changes suggestive diminished hyperfunction.
Current Opinion in Otolaryngology & Head and Neck Surgery | 2014
Mara Behlau; Fabiana Zambon; Glaucya Madazio
Purpose of reviewRecent advances with regard to occupational voice disorders are highlighted with emphasis on issues warranting consideration when assessing, training, and treating professional voice users. Recent findingsFindings include the many particularities between the various categories of professional voice users, the concept that the environment plays a major role in occupational voice disorders, and that biopsychosocial influences should be analyzed on an individual basis. Assessment via self-evaluation protocols to quantify the impact of these disorders is mandatory as a component of an evaluation and to document treatment outcomes. Discomfort or odynophonia has evolved as a critical symptom in this population. Clinical trials are limited and the complexity of the environment may be a limitation in experiment design. SummaryThis review reinforced the need for large population studies of professional voice users; new data highlighted important factors specific to each group of voice users. Interventions directed at student teachers are necessities to not only improving the quality of future professionals, but also to avoid the frustration and limitations associated with chronic voice problems. The causative relationship between the work environment and voice disorders has not yet been established. Randomized controlled trials are lacking and must be a focus to enhance treatment paradigms for this population.
CoDAS | 2014
Felipe Moreti; Fabiana Zambon; Mara Behlau
PURPOSE To identify the relationship among the type of dysphonia, vocal deviation self-assessed and the presence of voice symptoms in adults. METHODS One hundred sixty-four subjects of both genders (58 males and 106 females, mean age 42.89 years) diagnosis of dysphonia, divided into three groups according to the type of dysphonia: 87 individuals with functional dysphonia, 35 individuals with organofunctional dysphonia and 42 individuals with organic dysphonia, answered the Brazilian validated version of Voice Symptom Scale (VoiSS) (Escala de Sintomas Vocais - ESV), that consists of 30 questions with four scores: Impairment, Emotional, Physical and Total, and self-assessed their voices as excellent, very good, good, fair or poor. RESULTS According to the dysphonia type, there were differences in ESV Impairment, Emotional and Total mean scores, which was not found in the Physical score. The Impairment, Emotional and Total mean scores were higher in organic dysphonia, followed by organofunctional dysphonia and finally functional dysphonia. When the vocal self-assessment is poor, the higher are the deviations in the Impairment, Emotional and Total ESV scores. CONCLUSIONS Individuals with organic dysphonia reported higher perception of voice symptoms, followed by subjects with organofunctional dysphonia and finally individuals with functional dysphonia. In general, individuals with dysphonia presented physical voice symptoms, regardless of the type of the dysphonia. Finally, there are direct correlations between Impairment, Emotional and Total ESV scores and the vocal self-assessment.
CoDAS | 2015
Fabiana Zambon; Felipe Moreti; Aline Cristina Tafarelo Vargas; Mara Behlau
PURPOSE To identify the efficiency characteristics and cutoff values of the dimensions of the Voice Activity and Participation Profile (VAPP) protocol, which discriminates the dysphonic and vocally healthy individuals; to verify if the cutoff values remain the same for a sample of teachers. METHODS Efficiency characteristics and cutoff values of VAPP data from 171 subjects were analyzed by receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve: 90 teachers (60 dysphonic and 30 vocally healthy individuals, with a similar mean age, p=0.418) and 81 nonteachers (48 dysphonic and 33 vocally healthy individuals, with a similar mean age, p=0.934). RESULTS The area under the ROC curve (AUC) and the cutoff values of the total score of VAPP for discriminating the individuals with and without dysphonia are different for the nonteachers and teachers. The nonteachers presented AUC=0.986 (p<0.001) and 4.5 points of cutoff of the total score of VAPP (sensitivity=95.8%; specificity=90.9%); the teachers presented AUC=0.872 (p<0.001) and 14.6 points of cutoff of the total score of VAPP (sensitivity=91.7%, specificity=75.9%). CONCLUSION The cutoff values of VAPP are different for the nonteachers and teachers, being higher for the teachers but with greater sensitivity and specificity for the nonteachers, and can be used to screen large populations with the risk of voice disorders.
Revista Cefac | 2014
Carolina Farah Paes; Fabiana Zambon; Mara Behlau
Purpose to compare signs of general autonomic dysfunction related to the voice in teachers with and without complaints. Methods adhibition of the Questionnaire of Autonomic Dysfunction (QAD) in 83 teachers, including 60 women and 23 men, with an average age of 37,6. The participants were distributed in two groups, with or without voice complaints, defined according to number of symptoms marked in the Protocol of Signs and Voices Symptoms. Results the group with voice complaints presented an average of 13,7 symptoms in the QAD of autonomic dysfunction and the group without complaints 7,7 (p=0,001). Considering only voice related neurovegetative signs, the group with complaints presented an average of 4,7 symptoms and the group without complaints 1,8 (p<0,001). When compared to the group without voice complaints the most predominant voice related symptoms in the group with voice complaints were: fatigability when speaking (p<0,001), need of constantly swallowing (p=0,014), sore throat (p=0,001), neck pain while speaking (p=0,003), temporomandibular pain or discomfort (p=0,017), constant need to yawn (p=0,023), frequent throat clearing (p=0,010) and tension in the head while speaking (p=0,019). The symptoms observed in the group without complaints were: nose obstruction (33,3%), difficulty breathing through the nose (29,2%) and sneezing (25%). Conclusion the group with voice complaints showed more number of neurovegetative symptoms, particularly on issues related to the voice, than the group without complaints.
CoDAS | 2017
Amanda Corrêa do Amaral; Fabiana Zambon; Felipe Moreti; Mara Behlau
Purpose To evaluate the vocal tract discomfort (VTD) reported by teachers, comparing their vocal self-assessment at three different times: before teaching, after four hours of teaching, and after eight hours of teaching. Methods The study sample was composed of 50 teachers: 42 women and eight men. The participating teachers were divided into two groups according to the cutoff value of the Voice Symptom Scale (VoiSS): Vocal Risk Group (VRG) and Vocally Healthy Group (VHG). The List of Vocal Signs and Symptoms (LVSS) was used to identify the number of vocal symptoms in each group. The groups were evaluated at three specific moments (before (BT) and after four (4HT) and eight (8HT) hours of teaching) by means of the Vocal Tract Discomfort Scale (VTD scale) and vocal self-assessment. Results The VRG presented more vocal signs and symptoms of the LVSS than the VHG (total: VHG=0.56/VRG=1.60, p<0.001; work-related VHG=0.79/VRG=2.49, p<0.001). The VHG did not report change in discomfort for both frequency (p=1.132) and severity (p=0.431) and showed better vocal self-assessment (BT=0.67; 4HT=0.96; 8HT=0.96, p=0.007). However, the VRG presented vocal tract discomfort after four and eight hours of teaching for both frequency (BT=1.60; 4HT=2.49; 8HT=2.95, p<0.001) and severity (BT=1.79; 4HT=2.52; 8HT=3.12, p<0.001) and worse voice self-assessment (BT=2.00; 4HT=2.42; 8HT=3.00, p<0.001). Conclusion Teachers at vocal risk present worse vocal self-assessment and increased vocal tract discomfort throughout the teaching working day.
CoDAS | 2016
Gisele Oliveira; Fabiana Zambon; Thays Vaiano; Flávia Pereira da Costa; Mara Behlau
The purpose of the study is to explore two reduced versions of the PEED-27 (Brazilian VDCQ) and compare them to the original version. It was performed a retrospective analysis of PEED-27 questionnaires of 100 individuals with vocal disorder, 37 men and 63 women, mean age of 43.7 in order to compare reduced versions of the instrument. The analysis showed that the three instruments have high level of correlation, thus their results are comparable (PEED 27 x 15, r=+0.910, p< 0.001; PEED 27 x 10, r=+0.873, p<0.001 and PEED 15 x 10, r=+0.924, p< 0.001). The PEED-10 and PEED-15 are reduced and adapted versions to the Brazilian Portuguese language. They evaluate strategies used by dysphonic individuals to cope with their voice problem. The clinician must decide which version to use based on the available time and on the need of more detailed information.
CoDAS | 2017
Joel Pinheiro; Kelly Cristina Alves Silverio; Larissa Thaís Donalonso Siqueira; Janine Santos Ramos; Alcione Ghedini Brasolotto; Fabiana Zambon; Mara Behlau
Objective To verify the correlation between vocal tract discomfort symptoms and perceived voice handicaps in gospel singers, analyzing possible differences according to gender. Methods 100 gospel singers volunteered, 50 male and 50 female. All participants answered two questionnaires: Vocal Tract Discomfort (VTD) scale and the Modern Singing Handicap Index (MSHI) that investigates the vocal handicap perceived by singers, linking the results of both instruments (p<0.05). Results Women presented more perceived handicaps and also more frequent and higher intensity vocal tract discomfort. Furthermore, the more frequent and intense the vocal tract symptoms, the higher the vocal handicap for singing. Conclusion Female gospel singers present higher frequency and intensity of vocal tract discomfort symptoms, as well as higher voice handicap for singing than male gospel singers. The higher the frequency and intensity of the laryngeal symptoms, the higher the vocal handicap will be.Objective To verify the correlation between vocal tract discomfort symptoms and perceived voice handicaps in gospel singers, analyzing possible differences according to gender. Methods 100 gospel singers volunteered, 50 male and 50 female. All participants answered two questionnaires: Vocal Tract Discomfort (VTD) scale and the Modern Singing Handicap Index (MSHI) that investigates the vocal handicap perceived by singers, linking the results of both instruments (p<0.05). Results Women presented more perceived handicaps and also more frequent and higher intensity vocal tract discomfort. Furthermore, the more frequent and intense the vocal tract symptoms, the higher the vocal handicap for singing. Conclusion Female gospel singers present higher frequency and intensity of vocal tract discomfort symptoms, as well as higher voice handicap for singing than male gospel singers. The higher the frequency and intensity of the laryngeal symptoms, the higher the vocal handicap will be.
Revista Cefac | 2016
Mara Behlau; Felipe Moreti; Fabiana Zambon; Gisele Oliveira
First of all, we would like to congratulate the authors for evaluating the vocal risk of future professional voice users. Actions like these prevent the development of dysphonia and potential frustration, which alone provide reason why the study is warranted. However, we were very concerned with the severity of the results, since the study was performed during a World Voice day screening. The conclusion of the study states that the individuals that were screened have a voice disorder.