As part of the treatment of cancer of the throat it often occurs that the larynx, including the vocal folds and the epiglottis and, if required, part of the pharynx, is removed (laryngectomy).
To enable the patient to eat and drink thereafter without foods or drinks landing in the trachea which is no longer closable now, the trachea is passed outwards so that a stoma is obtained in the throat (a tracheostoma).
To also enable voice production again, it is usual to place a valve in the wall between the esophagus and the trachea. Air flowing out of the lungs can then be passed from the trachea through the valve to the upper part of the esophagus of which tissue along which the air flows is vibrated by the passing air to generate a voice or at least a sound which has to perform this function. The patient can then speak by keeping the tracheostoma closed so that air is passed through the valve to the esophagus.
Drawbacks of this solution are that the voice sounds unnaturally “belching”, that speech of such patients is hard to understand, and that the base frequency of the generated sound is too low (40-70 Hz vs. 90-120 Hz for healthy men and 190-220 Hz for healthy women).
Many efforts have meanwhile been made to solve these problems, inter alia by providing voice-producing prostheses in electronic form or in a form driven by exhaled air.
Known electronic prostheses are provided with a voltage source and a manual control outside the body. The vibration source is then pressed against the throat or incorporated in a dental prosthesis. Important drawbacks of such apparatuses are the difficulty of learning the above manual control and the robot-like voice.
Another voice-producing prosthesis already known is arranged to be driven by air. This prosthesis may be connected to the tracheostoma and comprises a vibrating element to be driven by air and a hose for passing vibrating air to the mouth in order to convert the generated vibration there into different sounds. Drawbacks of this prosthesis are the mediocre quality of the voice and the visual unattractiveness of the vibration source and the hose leading to the mouth, which further adversely affect the convenience of use.
A voice-producing prosthesis according to the preamble of claim 1 is known from EP-B-0 573 888. In this prosthesis a vibrations-generating element is placed in the shunt valve in the wall between the trachea and the esophagus. However, in this prosthesis the problem also occurs that the voice sounds substantially less natural and less understandable than that of a person with healthy, intact vocal cords.
U.S. Pat. No. 1,836,816 discloses a voice-producing apparatus in which a supply hose for connection to a stoma connects to a housing with a passage, and in which a discharge hose connects to the housing. The housing is provided with an opening communicating with the supply hose. Breathing takes place via this opening. By closing the opening with, e.g., the thumb, air is passed via the housing over a reed which is thereby vibrated. Sound thus generated is passed via the discharge hose into the mouth and can be converted there into speech by articulating to a certain degree.
According to the specification, the reed, when vibrating, vigorously strikes a rubber stop and thereby closes an opening via which the supply hose communicates with the discharge hose. According to this document, a sound is thereby generated which, in addition to the base frequency, contains relatively strong harmonic frequencies and thus sounds natural. Also when using this apparatus, however, it is found that there is a need for an improvement towards a natural, well understandable voice.
It is an object of the invention to provide a solution which enables patients, after a laryngectomy operation, to possess a more natural and better understandable voice than is the case when using the discussed prostheses.
This object is achieved according to the present invention by carrying out a voice-producing prosthesis according to claim 1.
By abruptly impeding movements of the vibrating element or the vibrating elements, a source sound is obtained which, during decomposition into sinusoidal frequencies in addition to a sinusoidal base frequency, contains a large number of overtones. Because this sound is generated near the position of the natural vocal cords and sound intensity and sound frequency are influenced in conjunction with each other under the influence of the speed of the airflow, a substantially improved understandability and a more natural voice are obtained.
Very advantageous practical examples of the invention are laid down in subclaims 2-14.
According to a practical possibility of the invention, a one-way valve is provided according to claim 15. By incorporating a voice-producing prosthesis according to the invention as a modular part in such a valve, it is made possible with a limited number of variants of the valve and the prosthesis to achieve a high degree of adaptation to, on the one hand, the patient's stature and, on the other hand, the patient's original vocal properties. In principle, such a voice-producing prosthesis can be used in any valve between the trachea and the esophagus.
Further objects, structural aspects and structural details of the invention will be described and explained below by means of practical examples, with reference to the drawings in which:
First of all, on the basis of
In a patient's head-throat portion shown in
Incorporated in the valve 9 is a voice-producing prosthesis 14 which, according to this example, is composed of a housing 15, a passage 16 through the housing 15 for passing air, and two vibratingly movable vibrating elements 17, 18 for vibrating air. This prosthesis 14 is separately shown in
Because the proposed voice-producing prosthesis 14 is worn near the place of the original vocal cords, the sound generated by the prosthesis 14 vibrates the air in the user's voice pipe in a natural way, and the voice thus generated can be converted by the mouth in a natural way into speech sounds. The voice-producing prosthesis is further worn inwardly so that it forms no visually disturbing element on the user's body and ensures improved convenience of use. The insertion and, if required, removal (e.g. for replacement) of the voice-producing prosthesis 14 can be carried out via the tracheostoma 3 with conventional clinical instruments.
The housing of the voice-producing prosthesis may, for that matter, also be integrated into the housing of the valve 9. Using individual housings for the valve and the voice-producing prosthesis has the advantage, however, that, on the one hand, a design may be selected for the valve for each patient on the basis of the thickness of the wall between the esophagus and the trachea and, on the other hand, independently of the external dimensions, a design may be selected for the voice-producing prosthesis of which the sound emission is most similar to the patient's original voice. Thus, in spite of a limited number of designs of the valve and the voice-producing prosthesis, a good many adaptations to different patients can be obtained.
By using lips with suitable geometry and material properties, a base frequency suitable for men and women can be obtained. By trimming the lips 17, 18, the sound produced by the prosthesis 14 can be precisely adjusted to a patient's wishes.
The lips 17, 18 each have a free end 20, 21 which, in the condition of rest, is directed downstream in a direction substantially parallel to the passage 16. This ensures that, even if the lips 17, 18 are shortened, the lips 17, 18, in the condition of rest, abut against each other with pretension. Because the shortening of the lips 17, 18 results in a decrease of the pretension at which the lips 17, 18, in the condition of rest, abut against each other, a very effective influence on the sound produced is obtained when shortening the lips 17, 18.
The patient, when speaking, can control the sound volume in a natural way by expelling air more strongly or more gently via the passageway 16. When the airflow through the passageway 16 in the direction indicated by an arrow 19 is stronger, the base frequency of the voice produced rises with the sound volume. This connection between sound volume and base frequency is also present in the voice production by means of healthy vocal cords and is experienced as natural intonation.
Because the lips are arranged to vibrate in reaction to an airflow through the passage 16, the lips are activated in a natural way to emit sound, and no separate sources of energy are required to drive the lips.
Because the lips 17, 18, during vibration, repeatedly come to abut against each other, the lips 17, 18 each form a stop against which is repeatedly struck by the other lip 18, 17 during vibration. The resulting vibration pattern therefore deviates from a sinusoidal vibration pattern and forms a composed sound built up from a sinusoidal base frequency and higher sinusoidal frequencies. These higher frequencies are important because they can be selectively amplified in the cavities of the throat, nose and mouth according to different patterns so as to produce different sounds.
The lips each form a vibrating element which projects from a substantially immovable connection to the housing 15 in the passage 16, the stop in the form of the other lip being located opposite a portion of the vibrating element spaced from this immovable connection. In principle, it is also possible to generate such a vibration pattern by using a single lip which vibrates against a fixed stop. However, by using two lips which each function as a stop for the other lip, a strong sound with a natural tone is simply obtained at a given base frequency and air displacement.
Since the portions 20, 21 of the lips 17, 18 functioning as stops are each located opposite a portion 21, 20 of the other lip 18, 17 located near a free end of the other lip 18, 17, the movement of the vibrating lips 17, 18 is very abruptly arrested during each cycle. This is advantageous for generating sound with a slight decrease of the intensity of the overtones, i.e. of which overtones have a great intensity.
For this purpose, it is further advantageous that in the condition of rest the vibrating element abuts against the stop and, more in particular, abuts against the stop with pretension.
For a proper understandability of voice, it is advantageous if the prosthesis generates air pulses of which the frequency spectrum contains a base frequency with overtones, the decrease of the intensity of the overtones being at most 18 dB/octave and preferably at most 12 dB/octave. In this connection, it is important that at most the second or the first derivative of the air pulse signal shows a discontinuity during each period.
A very good imitation of natural voice is obtained if the prosthesis is arranged to carry out displacements of which the first derivative shows discontinuities. Vibrations are then generated with a frequency spectrum of sinusoids composed of a base frequency and frequencies above, of which the intensity is lower by 10-14 dB/octave and preferably about 12 dB/octave. The fact that such a sound characteristic is advantageous for the understandability of synthetic or resynthetized speech is known per se from a publication entitled Effect of Glottal Pulse Shape on the Quality of natural Vowels; A. E. Rosenberg in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America; Vol. 49, No. 2, 1971.
As best shown in
Through the housing 45 an air passage 46 extends in which a vibrating element 47 is located. At a stepped transition 54, the vibrating element 47 projects from a wall of the passage 46 in a direction against the general direction of flow indicated by an arrow 49. For the purpose of closing the passage 46, the housing is provided with a cover 43 integrally formed therewith.
When the user exhales air through the passage 46 in a direction indicated by the arrow 49, the vibrating element 47, just like the lips 17, 18 according to the above-described example, is set in a vibration which forms an oscillating equilibrium between aerodynamic deflecting forces and elastic restoring forces. The vibrating element 47 comprises a bending joint 55 near the foot of the vibrating element 47. On both sides of the bending joint 55, the vibrating element 47 comprises stops 56, 57 located opposite associated stops 58, 59 in the wall of the passage 46. The stops 55-59 impede deflections of the vibrating element 47 from a specific degree of deflection. The vibrating element 47 further comprises a thickened portion adjoining the stops 55, 56, which stiffens the vibrating element 47 so that the stops provide an abrupt impediment to the movements of the vibrating element 47. This, in turn, results in that the vibrating element 47, in use, generates a sound with a broad distribution of frequencies.
It will be clear to those skilled in the art that many other embodiments are possible and conceivable within the scope of the proposed invention. Thus, for instance (as shown in
As far as the apparatus shown in
The vibrating elements 107, 108 are each provided with a hollow space filled with a fluid or a soft substance 120, 121. The effect thus achieved is, on the one hand, a strong increase of the effective mass of the vibrating elements 107, 108 and, on the other hand, no or very little stiffening of the vibrating elements 107, 108. This, in turn, makes it possible to generate a low base frequency corresponding to that of a natural voice with relatively small vibrating elements 107, 108 which can be simply placed in the area of or near the place of the former larynx. Like in the example of
Although a low base frequency is very advantageous in combination with the use of a stop and in combination with one or more vibrating elements arranged to increase the sound volume and the base frequency with the force of an airflow through the passage, the effect of a low base frequency through the high mass and low stiffness of these vibrating elements may also be used advantageously without combining them with a stop but in combination with one or more vibrating elements arranged to increase the sound volume and the base frequency with the intensity of an airflow through the passage.
The fluid or soft substance used may be, for instance, air, a gas, a liquid, a paste or a gel, while hardly viscous fluids, such as water and air, are generally preferred because of the little damping. Using a gel may be advantageous because leakage problems are limited and a gel shows relatively little damping effect during a vibrating movement.
The fluid is preferably a liquid because this ensures the most favorable combination of a big mass with little stiffness and little damping effect.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NL99/00221 | Apr 1999 | WO | international |
1008917 | Apr 1998 | NL | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10632059 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 10989928 | Nov 2004 | US |
Parent | 09690510 | Oct 2000 | US |
Child | 10632059 | Jul 2003 | US |