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Before & After

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SPASMODIC DYSPHONIA
CURES BY DIRECT VOICE REHABILITATION
The medical orientation says... There are no cures of
Spasmodic Dysphonia
Dr. Morton Cooper is the only Doctor in the world reporting
ongoing cures by Direct Voice Rehabilitation (DVR) of the
spasmodic voice (SD), (adductor, abductor and mixed) as
well as many other types of voice problems for over 30 years.
- Medical
orientation: Cause unknown. Theories include:
1) neurological, 2) dystonia, 3) chemical brain
imbalance, 4) dysfunctional basal ganglia (not found
on autopsy) 5) gene related disorder, 6) psychiatric,
7) molecular biology, 8) Reflux (GERD, gastro esophageal
reflux disorder)
- No
medical cures ever for 130 years since Traube
first described the condition in 1871.
- Non-medical
- Dr. Cooper: Cause of the SD problem: Misuse and
abuse of the voice. (speaking singing one or both)
- Ongoing
Cures for more than 30 years by Dr. Cooper's
non-medical DVR
SD patients
diagnosed at UCLA Medical Center, Scripps, Cedars-Sinai,
Mayo Clinic, Vanderbilt Medical Center, etc. (see
website) Confirmed lasting cures. |
- Medical
orientation: Botulinum toxin known as Botox
(Bo for Botulinum and Tox for toxin), a deadly poison,
is the medical treatment of choice. Experimental.
Not directly FDA approved for SD. Dosage uncertain.
Guessing game. Needle placement can be traumatic.
(See SD patient
statements on my website). Permanent voice loss
at times. Rollercoaster ride.
- Non-medical
- Dr. Cooper: Treatment by Direct Voice Rehabilitation
(DVR), non-risk, non-invasive.
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- Medical
orientation: Treatment: Ongoing botulinum toxin
shots every few weeks or months for life, 4-10 per
year or more, each year, every year. Symptom relief
temporary.
**In the
December, 1999 National Spasmodic Dysphonia Association
Newsletter, page 7, Dr. Gerald Berke, Chairman of
UCLA Head and Neck Division reports regarding Botox
(botulinum toxin): "...there are some obvious drawbacks.
It requires lifelong visits from 4 to 10 times per
year for repeat injections. The injections are not
inexpensive. The interval between post injection
breathiness, good voice, and the return of symptoms
may not be very long in some patients. Hypersensitivity
and antibody formation have been shown to produce
some long term structural changes in muscle cells."
- Non-medical
- Dr. Cooper: DVR is non-invasive, can help change
your voice and change your life. Dr. Cooper looks
to curative treatment vs. medical symptomatic, palliative
band-aid care.
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- Medical orientation: A leading medical
doctor has asked that Botox be withdrawn at the
earliest possible time fearing the long-term downside
effects on the body. Can/and/or/will ongoing Botox
shots for SD lead to or result in cancer? Nobody
knows the long-term downside effects on the body
to possible cancer. Serious side effects are not
being reported. (See SD patient statements). Not
safe and effective in short-term use as thought.
- Non-medical - Dr. Cooper: No risk involved.
Safe. Cures, recoveries and improvements.
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- Medical orientation: Surgery for Spasmodic
Dysphonia. The Dedo surgery is reported to be in
the dustbin of history by Dr. Robert Sataloff, Editor
of the Journal of Voice. No cures ever. Approximately
2/3 of those undergoing that surgery are worse off
after surgery (ASHA SD Fact Sheet, 1994.) A new
surgery by Dr. Gerald Berke has shown some serious
failures. No cures reported. Botox treatment is
a full medical employment act, an annuity for life
for the medics giving these shots.
- Non-medical - Dr. Cooper's DVR reports
ongoing cures of SD for over 30 years. Patients
who have been cured of Spasmodic Dysphonia can be
contacted through Dr. Cooper's office.
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