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Recovery of Vocal Fold Epithelium after Acute Phonotrauma.

Citation
Rousseau, B., et al. “Recovery Of Vocal Fold Epithelium After Acute Phonotrauma.”. Cells, Tissues, Organs, pp. 93-104.
Center Vanderbilt University
Author Bernard Rousseau, Tsuyoshi Kojima, Carolyn K Novaleski, Emily E Kimball, Carla Valenzuela V, Masanobu Mizuta, James J Daniero, Gaelyn Garrett, Preeti Sivasankar
Keywords electron microscopy, Epithelial barrier, gene expression, Phonotrauma, Vocal fold
Abstract

We investigated the timeline of tissue repair of vocal fold epithelium after acute vibration exposure using an in vivo rabbit model. Sixty-five New Zealand white breeder rabbits were randomized to 120 min of modal- or raised-intensity phonation. After the larynges were harvested at 0, 4, 8, and 24 h, and at 3 and 7 days, the vocal fold tissue was evaluated using electron microscopy and quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. There was an immediate decrease in the microprojection depth and height following raised-intensity phonation, paired with upregulation of cyclooxygenase-2. This initial 24-h period was also characterized by the significant downregulation of junction proteins. Interleukin 1β and transforming growth factor β1 were upregulated for 3 and 7 days, respectively, followed by an increase in epithelial cell surface depth at 3 and 7 days. These data appear to demonstrate a shift from inflammatory response to the initiation of a restorative process in the vocal fold epithelium between 24 h and 3 days. Despite the initial damage from raised-intensity phonation, the vocal fold epithelium demonstrates a remarkable capacity for the expeditious recovery of structural changes from transient episodes of acute phonotrauma. While structurally intact, the return of functional barrier integrity may be delayed by repeated episodes of phonotrauma and may also play an important role in the pathophysiology of vocal fold lesions.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cells, tissues, organs
Volume
204
Issue
2
Number of Pages
93-104
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1422-6421
DOI
10.1159/000472251
Alternate Journal
Cells Tissues Organs (Print)
PMID
28647731
PMCID
PMC5555600
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