RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: There are various exercises for voice therapy, but current evidence is insufficient to decide the most effective training technique for each type of dysphonia. This study focused on vocal attack as one of the causes of dysphonia. Hence, vocal attack during voice therapy exercises was investigated using photoglottogram (PGG). METHODS: Eighteen healthy adult subjects (10 males and 8 females) were included in this study. The first to fifth vocal waves during natural voice, hard and soft voice onset, and semi-occluded vocal tract exercises (SOVTE: humming, tubing, and lip trill) were assessed. We also calculated the 25% vocal fold open quotient (OQ) using a PGG and compared these parameters. RESULTS: The 25% OQ did not show any sex-related differences. In the first wave, the 25% OQ for hard attack was significantly lower than that for soft attack, tongue-out humming, and lip trill. In contrast, the 25% OQ value for soft attack was significantly higher than that for humming, 6 mm tube phonation, and lip trill. The 25% OQ values differed between SOVTE procedures; it was higher for the 13 mm tube phonation than for the 6 mm tube phonation. The 25% OQ at voice onset in the first to fifth waves differed depending on the SOVTE technique, indicating different voice onset patterns. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that appropriate selection of SOVTE tailored for each patient may have benefit in further voice improvement. Future research should focus on conducting a similar study on patients with dysphonia.
RESUMO
Apocrine carcinoma, which is strictly defined as over 90% of tumor cells showing apocrine differentiation, is a rare variant of breast cancer. Here we report an uncommon case in which apocrine carcinomas developed concurrently in both breasts; in addition, a sarcomatoid spindle cell lesion was coincident in the right breast. Both apocrine carcinomas were immunohistochemically negative for estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PgR), but diffusely positive for androgen receptor (AR), GCDFP-15, and HER2. The presence of intraductal components in bilateral carcinomas and the absence of lymph node metastasis suggested that they were more likely to be individual primary lesions rather than metastatic disease. The spindle cell lesion showed a relatively well-circumscribed nodule contiguous with the apocrine carcinoma. HER2 oncoprotein overexpression was observed not only in the apocrine carcinoma, but also in the spindle cell lesion. Since the spindle cell component was intimately admixed with apocrine carcinoma and had focal cytokeratin expression, we diagnosed it as metaplastic spindle cell carcinoma, which was originated from the apocrine carcinoma. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of a patient with synchronous bilateral apocrine carcinomas coinciding with metaplastic carcinoma.