Videokymography
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Videokymography is a high-speed medical imaging method to visualize the human vocal fold vibration dynamics. It was invented by
Jan G. Švec Jan Švec (born 22 November 1966) is a Czech voice scientist. He is the inventor of videokymography, a method for high-speed visualization of vocal-fold vibrations, which is being used for advanced diagnosis of voice disorders. As of 2011, ...
under the guidance of Harm K. Schutte. A digital technique for high-speed visualization of vibration, called videokymography, was developed and applied to the vocal folds. The system uses a modified video camera able to work in two modes: high-speed (nearly 8,000 images/s) and standard (50 images/s in CCIR norm). In the high-speed mode, the camera selects one active horizontal line (transverse to the glottis) from the whole laryngeal image. The successive line images were presented in real time on a commercial TV monitor, filling each video frame from top to bottom. The system makes it possible to observe left-right asymmetries, open quotient, propagation of mucosal waves, movement of the upper and, in the closing phase, the lower margins of the vocal folds, etc. The technique is suitable for further processing and quantification of recorded vibration.


History

Videokymography was developed in 1994 by
Czech Czech may refer to: * Anything from or related to the Czech Republic, a country in Europe ** Czech language ** Czechs, the people of the area ** Czech culture ** Czech cuisine * One of three mythical brothers, Lech, Czech, and Rus' Places * Czech, ...
and
Dutch Dutch commonly refers to: * Something of, from, or related to the Netherlands * Dutch people () * Dutch language () Dutch may also refer to: Places * Dutch, West Virginia, a community in the United States * Pennsylvania Dutch Country People E ...
scientists, Jan G. Švec and Harm K. Schutte, in collaboration with the Lambert Instruments company, as a low-cost, high-speed imaging method for examination of vocal fold vibrations. After being developed in the Netherlands, in 1996 it was introduced to clinical practice in
Prague Prague ( ; cs, Praha ; german: Prag, ; la, Praga) is the capital and largest city in the Czech Republic, and the historical capital of Bohemia. On the Vltava river, Prague is home to about 1.3 million people. The city has a temperate ...
by a Czech laryngologist and phoniatrician František Šram in collaboration with J.G. Švec. In 1997, the three founders of videokymography, Švec, Schutte and Šram, made an award-winning scientific video "Introduction to Videokymography" for the World ORL Congress in Sydney. A second generation videokymography camera was developed in the Netherlands in 2006 by Q. Qiu, again under the guidance of H. K. Schutte. Subsequently Q. Qiu and colleagues founded the company Cymo, B.V. producing the videokymography camera along with other medical imaging products and became its director. Videokymography complements another visualization method known as
videostroboscopy Videostroboscopy is a high-speed medical imaging method used to visualize the dynamics of human vocal fold vibration. When stimulated by the pressure of breath exhaled from the lungs, the two vocal folds (also known as vocal cords) open and close ...
for early diagnostics of voice disorders and therapy evaluation. It has spread as a clinical and research tool to clinics around the world, and kymographic display was adopted also for digital high-speed videoendoscopy.


Details

Accompanied by breath under lung pressure, the glottis and vocal folds move in an open-close motion. During the opening and closing, the process by which the vocal folds meet is referred to as ''
phonation The term phonation has slightly different meanings depending on the subfield of phonetics. Among some phoneticians, ''phonation'' is the process by which the vocal folds produce certain sounds through quasi-periodic vibration. This is the defin ...
'' (non-technically called vocalization), which is the general function of how vocal sound is produced. During phonation, vibratory cycles occur all too quickly for the unaided eye to observe. Therefore, if there lies a problem within someone's phonation cycle, it cannot be examined or diagnosed without the aid of technology like videostroboscopy or videokymography. The imaging of vocal fold vibrations is done by inserting an
endoscope An endoscope is an inspection instrument composed of image sensor, optical lens, light source and mechanical device, which is used to look deep into the body by way of openings such as the mouth or anus. A typical endoscope applies several modern t ...
through the mouth in order to view the vocal folds from the top.


Advantage of Videokymography

The process of videokymography offers a particular advantage over methods like videostroboscopy. The process of videostroboscopy has been reported as successful in accuracy, revision, and treatment of diagnoses while its limitations have also been mentioned to involve its reliability on synchronization and inability to produce concrete vibratory cycles. Therefore, examinations of irregular vibratory patterns that may be caused by a vocal disorder are not feasible by videostroboscopy. In this area of examination, videokymography offers an advantage due to its ability to produce vibratory cycles through the use of its high-speed imaging. This makes it an ideal complementary method to videostroboscopy for a patient interested in vocal fold examination or diagnoses.


Future

In recent years, there have been studies and experiments conducted to create a new form of visualization developed from videokymography known as
depth kymography Depth-kymography is the 3D display of the human vocal fold vibrations by measuring their vertical and horizontal movements simultaneously, using a specially designed 3D endoscope. This 3D imaging method and the scientific term "Depth-Kymography" wer ...
. Among the scientists whom have implemented these experiments, Dr. Harm Schutte, the Dutch scientist who co-developed videokymography is one of them. Whereas videokymography is a two-dimensional visualization of vocal-fold movement produced by an endoscope that registers only horizontal vocal-fold movement, depth kymography is a three-dimensional visualization produced by a specially designed 3D endoscope that registers movement of the vocal folds in the horizontal and the vertical directions with time being the third dimension. This brings direction and focus to the development of another detailed and analytical form of vocal fold visualization that is potentially an evolution of videokymography.


See also

* Kymograph


References

{{Reflist


External links

* http://www.kymography.com/ Medical imaging