Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up

Nerve test predicts voice box recovery in children

Share
Nerve test predicts voice box recovery in children
Photo by Patrick Fore / Unsplash

When a child's vocal cords are paralyzed, parents and doctors face a tough question: will the voice come back? A new analysis of 33 studies suggests a nerve test called laryngeal electromyography (LEMG) can help answer that.

LEMG measures electrical activity in the muscles of the voice box. The test was 82% sensitive at predicting recovery, meaning it correctly identified most children who would get better. Children with normal electrical signals were more than 5 times as likely to recover as those without.

The analysis included children from day 1 of life to 18 years old. But the results come with important caveats. The confidence intervals were wide, meaning the true accuracy could be lower. Only 5 studies were combined for the main analysis, and the studies were observational, so cause and effect cannot be proven.

Still, for a condition where predicting recovery has been difficult, LEMG offers a useful clue. More research is needed before it becomes standard practice.

What this means for you:
LEMG nerve test shows moderate accuracy for predicting vocal cord recovery in children.
Share