Tuesday, July 22, 2025

I Won't Know What You Do

The day was almost over for me. I had successfully seen two people in my area, and had successfully led them through some activities. I was running now on very little energy. There was a saving grace in this being my last visit of the day, because this consumer had some different needs than the rest of my caseload. She had had a cardiac episode that took her to the hospital, where she underwent a cardiac bypass graft (CABG, or by those in the know, "cabbage"). Your question might be now, how do problems with your heart affect your speech? Answering that question required more than a few minutes, but I felt it was critical for our first visit to establish with the consumer - why I was the expert. I needed her buy - in for the evaluation procedures I had planned for her. If she didn't know what I was doing, why would she want to burn energy and do the work to get better!
She soon did say she understood that the major nerve, called the vagus ("wandering") or tenth cranial nerve, feeds both her heart and her larynx, or voice box. This connection often shows up in the videofluoroscopy suite, when a consumer presents for the swallowing x - ray with the complaint of a dry cough - and the sensation that something is lodged in his throat. Often, the person has a history of cardiac problems. Not only can the primary medical concern affect the larynx's function, but the support the consumer received to breathe during the surgery, would show up as a dry cough. Hmmmm....my listening to her voice told me that there was intermittently, less power in her sound with pitch "breaks", like a sputtering short - circuit in the stream of conversation.
I was thrilled to see last week the new Netflix comedy special by Vir Das; not for the misfortune he had to overcome, but that he had a treatment technique suggested for him that this lady used as well. He cut great comedic hay from this, but it is simple, it's real-world, and it often helps! You'll have to see the special to learn the technique. I told my patient, who had a quizzical face on when I handed her the specialized equipment, "OK, I've shown you how to do this. You gave it a try, and you showed me that YOU know how to do it. When I'm not here, I've asked you to practice using it in your exercise, but - I won't know what you do! I can only hope that you'll try it and notice if it gets easier - that might tell you, speaking longer is getting easier!".
At the end of the special, Vir Das showed what he had learned. My patient did as well - the credit not due to me, but in the faith she had shown, that she would get better.

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