Author(s)
John Gniady, MD
Brandon LaBarge, MD
Jeffrey Lorenz, MD
Affiliation(s)
Penn State Health;
Abstract:
Background: Laryngeal dystonia is a heterogenous disorder consisting of involuntary spasm of laryngeal muscles. There are multiple forms including adductor, abductor, and mixed phenotypes. The disorder is thought to be multifactorial, with various reported associations with family history of dystonia or movement disorder. The relationship between laryngeal dystonia and various neurologic disorders is not well defined in the literature.
Methods: We utilized the TriNetX de-identified electronic medical record database system spanning 2010-2023 to assess the prevalence of laryngeal dystonia with common neurologic disorders, compared to an age-sex matched control population. We included patients with the laryngeal spasm J38.5 ICD-10 code and 64617 CPT code, in order to categorize laryngeal dystonia patients undergoing chemodenervation.
Results: The patient cohort consisted of approximately 4000 patients. 75% were female, 71% were white, and the mean age was 61 years. The laryngeal dystonia population had an elevated relative risk of Parkinson’s disease (RR = 2.7, 1.8-3.9, 95% confidence interval). In contrast, the relative risk of Alzheimer’s disease was decreased in the laryngeal dystonia population (RR = 0.28, 0.16-0.48 95% confidence interval). There were no differences between the laryngeal dystonia and control populations for Multiple sclerosis, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, epilepsy, migraine, muscular dystrophy, or cerebral palsy.
Conclusions: Laryngeal dystonia patients have a significantly greater association with Parkinson’s disease, and less association with Alzheimer’s disease compared to control population. There were no meaningful associations with the remainder of the neurologic conditions included in the study.