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THE MIRACLE VOICE AND SPEECH DOCTOR
By Morton Cooper, Ph.D.
I lost my voice years ago while I was in college. My voice was
poor to begin with and the help I received to improve it resulted
in losing my voice. My voice would last for five minutes; I had
a burning sensation in my throat and it was extremely difficult
to talk. I saw 12 doctors without finding relief. I was told to
live with my voice problem since it was said to be due to genes,
heredity, neurological factors, postnasal drip, allergies or stress.
Then, I was referred to a psychiatrist whose philosophy was that
I should become adjusted to my voice problem. The doctor himself
had a failing voice which he attributed to genes or heredity. I
fled his office. The 13th doctor I consulted knew immediately that
I was misusing my voice. I had gone from a nasal baritone voice
to a deep throat bass voice, sounding like a clone of Henry Kissinger.
The doctor wanted to know why I was talking so deep throat and low
pitched. I told him two professors in the college speech department
had directed me to that voice. I obtained some relief from the doctor's
direction, but continued to experience voice problems until I entered
the field of speech pathology and became my own voice therapist.
Eventually I found the secrets of the speaking voice and the simplicities
involved in producing an efficient, well-used, untiring, star-quality
speaking voice.
This is the story of my recovery, the cure of my own voice problem,
and the realization that many others have voice problems. People
go from doctor to doctor, getting lotions, potions, medications,
injections, and/or surgeries without curing their voice problems.
Those who hear me today tell me how lucky I am to have been born
with a great voice. However, I wasn't born with a great voice. I
developed it through a long journey of time and practice until I
figured out how to achieve an excellent voice simply and directly.
Today, I am known as the 'Voice Doctor to the stars' after working
with celebrities such as Kirk Douglas, Anne Bancroft, Henry Fonda,
Richard Crenna, Cheryl Ladd, Harold Robbins, Joan Rivers, Dennis
Weaver, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Rob Lowe, Lucille Ball, Diahann Carroll,
O.J. Simpson, Rosy Grier, and Shadoe Stevens, to name a few. (These
wonderful people were kind enough to allow me to use their names
to make the public aware of voice problems and voice help.)
After doing graduate work in voice at Indiana University (M.A.),
Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif., and University of California,
Los Angeles (UCLA), (Ph.D.), I realized my voice problem had been
early or beginning spastic dysphonia. In my textbook, Modern Techniques
of Vocal Rehabilitation, I differentiated between full blown, developed
spastic dysphonia and the early form of spastic dysphonia which
I labeled "Incipient Spastic Dysphonia";
SPASTIC/SPASMODIC DYSPHONIA Spastic or spasmodic dysphonia is
a strangled voice that sounds as if a person is being choked.
The voice is out of control. Spasmodic dysphonia, in contrast
to spastic dysphonia, is a dysphonia that comes and goes depending
upon the person, place, or situation. With spastic dysphonia,
as the name implies, the strangled voice remains steady, out of
control, and essentially choked at all times.
Never, while on the faculty and staff at the UCLA Mdical Center,
Head and Neck Division (1961-1970), did I read of a single cure
for spastic or spasmodic dysphonia. The condition was considered
hopeless by physicians and speech pathologists since the cause was
found to be neurological by medical research and speech pathologists.
I presumed that the negative prognosis for voice improvement, let
alone a cure, for spastic or spasmodic dysphonia (SD) was accurate.
For years I followed the traditional pattern of treatment for this
condition. There were no recoveries, no cures. In 1970, after leaving
UCLA to go into private practice, I changed my approach, using a
technique called "Direct Voice Rehabilitation", which
I developed and used to help patients with other voice disorders.
To my amazement, SD patients responded to direct voice rehabilitation.
Looking to my extensive clinical experience with SD patients, I
found that the onset and condition of the problem was due to voice
misuse and/or abuse with psychological overtones. As soon as I began
speaking and writing about recoveries and cures from SD, I was told
the patients I had helped were not suffering from SD. The medical
establishment almost across the board insisted that SD is incurable
since it is neurological. My response was that these patients were
diagnosed as having severe SD by the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.;
Stanford University; UCLA Medical Center; and by some of the foremost
laryngologists in the country.
My approach to SD is simple and direct. It involves natural self-help
by the patient, no surgery, no botulinum toxin, no risk, and no
downside effect. The main form of approach in treating SD medically
is by using an injection of botulinum toxin (a poisonous substance),
now called Botox, a sugar-coated term for poison. Botulinum toxin
is injected into one or both vocal cords, creating a temporary paralysis
in an attempt to stop the strangulated voice and the strain in producing
it. This injection was said at first to last nine months; however,
there is great variability in patients, and some have been taking
the injections within two weeks at times. No one knows the downside
effect of botox on the body.
At major SD meetings, the discussion centers about whether the
poison should be injected into one or both vocal cords. The purpose
of the injections is to reduce the symptoms; there is no discussion
about cures for SD. However, Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
has not approved use of this substance for treatment of SD. One
of the leading neurologists at a recent meeting concerning SD asked
that Botox poison be withdrawn at the earliest possible time in
favor of another substance, but this statement has not appeared
in journals or newsletters nor has it been discussed at major SD
meetings that I have attended. In order to inform physicians, speech
pathologists, and the general public that there is hope for hopeless
SD voices, I produced an audio and a video of a number of SD patients
"before and after" direct voice rehabilitation, demonstrating
their recoveries and cures by my approach. I have presented my recovered
SD patients at various professional meetings in the past, but of
late have been rejected time and again. The American Speech- Language-Hearing
Association (ASHA) continues to ignore cures and recoveries from
SD. They state, "At present, there is no cure for spasmodic
dysphonia." (ASHA, November 1993, p. 65) Why? Christy L. Ludlow,
Ph.D., chief of the voice and speech section of the National Institute
on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) said, "Voice
therapy is not a cure-all." (Our Voice, Fall-Winter, 1993,
p. 4)
In contrast, Professor Arnold Aronson, Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic,
has publicly acknowledged my cures of SD. Ludlow's program using
botox has not produced a single cure for SD that I am aware of.
In fact, one patient from NIDCD, who had received 12 botox shots
covering eight years and was unable to talk, recovered her voice
with intensive direct voice rehabilitation, saying that on a scale
of 10 she judged her voice to be a nine. I have been published widely
in medical, scientific, and popular journals as well as textbooks,
telling of my procedure and successful results involving all types
of voices and voice problems. A study I did involving hoarse voices
with 155 patients found that 150 were using too low a pitch, lower
throat resonance, and poor breath support. A follow-up of 128 patients
found 98 percent remained good to excellent seven years following
the completion of direct voice rehabilitation. Almost all bad or
failing voices are easy to change for the better by direct voice
rehabilitation, but patient cooperation is essential. If people
are looking for better voices or they have voices that are failing
or hoarse, they may achieve their wish by simple, direct voice help.
There is hope for almost all voices, including so-called hopeless
voices. Published in Let's Live, February 1994, pp. 72-73.
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