Hi
Quote from: ShadowCharms on October 27, 2015, 06:41:21 PM
What I'm wondering is:
1 what are the possible negative outcomes?
2 Can you completely and permanently lose the ability to speak?
3 Can you develop hoarseness that never goes away?
4 Can you permanently lose the ability to talk above a certain volume?
5 Are the possible negative outcomes worse than just not getting as high of a pitch as one would like?
1 Generally with glottoplasty the possible negative outcomes can be severe, so it is crucial to pick a surgeon that is skilled and experienced.
2 This is in principle possible. I know of one person who lost her ability to speak for over a year after a glottoplasty done, I believe in Germany or Austria. Another person I know of has ripped the suture by accident in the early post op phase and part of the tissue started to grow wildly, threatening the opening of her airways - she had a corrective surgery and has her voice back, but there was some risk that this could have lead to her loosing the voice.
3 There is definitely some risk. this depends highly on the skill and technique of the surgeon. Permanent hoarseness can happen if the "V" shape at the commissure is more U shaped due to bad scar formation or if ther are "air pockets" forming under the newly created suture. I know Dr Kim is aware of both and tries to minimize the issues with both, I cannot comment on other surgeons except the ones in Germany who seem to be rather oblivious of this issue and regularly produce results that have permanent hoarseness.
4 Glottoplasty in my opinion and from what I heard here almost always means you loose a bit of volume. At first you loose a lot but recovery from that loss is IMO rarely 100%. I believe this has partly to do with the reduced airflow during phonation, so its partly a "natural" issue - female voices usually do have less volume than male voices.
5 - see 2-4

Its hard to say if Yeson (Dr Kim) or Dr Haben has less risks because we only see limited cases and negative outcomes are less likely to be reported. I agree however that I heard no really bad outcome of Yeson yet, in one case the suture ripped because of an accident within the early healing period, in a few cases pitch changed too little or people complained about pitch changing but still sounding male - the latter needs to be adressed with therapy though, not surgery. Some people have reported breathiness and hoarseness beyond the initial healing period, but apparently for most, that disappeared within the 12 month period that Dr Kim designates as healing period. Personally, I do experience some breathiness now at month 7-8 but it is better or worse on some days or other days, worse when the pills ended etc - so I hope it will be a temporary issue. I am extremely critical about myself though - most people would not even notice that breathiness much.
QuoteAt this point in my life, having a passable voice might be the difference for me between being safe in public and not being safe in public, but I want to make sure that surgery is a safe thing for me to do. I know that historically, I have been told that it wasn't, but I've been hearing that that has changed.
That sounds like a tough situation - how come?
The basic technique of voice surgery has not changed - there still is glottoplasty and CTA just like 20 years ago, but the details in the technique and the skill of the surgeons who do it has changed - at least with some surgeons...