April 19, 2026

Green Health Revolution

Natural Health, Harmonious Life

Menopause can disrupt women’s vocal tone and quality, says USF Health vocal researcher

Menopause can disrupt women’s vocal tone and quality, says USF Health vocal researcher

A new USF Health study published Sept. 9 in the journal Menopause provides a comprehensive and innovative examination of a previously underexplored
phenomenon: vocal changes that women may experience during menopause, often the result
of falling levels of estrogen and progesterone.

The groundbreaking paper from a group led by Yael Bensoussan, MD, MSc, inaugural director
of the USF Health Voice Center in the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, and
Rupal Patel, PhD, professor at Northeastern University, explains that those most likely
to suffer unwanted voice changes — resulting in roughness, hoarseness and a loss of
vocal stability — are women who use their voices professionally, such as teachers,
actors and especially singers.

Voice production is a complex physiological process requiring “the precise coordination
of multiple systems: respiration, phonation, articulation and resonance,” said Dr.
Bensoussan and her collaborators.

They explain that even small disruptions to any one of those elements can have an
adverse impact on vocal function. Vocal folds within the larynx rely on musculature,
mucosal pliability and proper airflow from the lungs to create sound. And the specific
balance of tension and elasticity of the vocal cords play a key role in vocal quality.

Furthermore, the paper finds, “hormonal fluctuations play a critical role in maintaining
the structural integrity of laryngeal tissues.”

The paper details a wide range of options for treatment. Among them:

Voice therapy: Overseen by a trained therapist, with the goal of a patient learning to vocalize
with less effort.

• Steaming and hydration: This treats dryness of mucosal tissues through daily hydration with small amounts
of water during the day, or inhaling steamed water.

• Systematic Hormone Therapy (HT): This is conducted in collaboration with the laryngology team and the patient’s gynecology
team.

• Bilateral vocal fold injection augmentation: This procedure is performed with injections into the vocal cords — either with local
or general anesthesia — with the goal of “plumping up” the vocal cord folds to counter
potential atrophy and ideally leading to an increase of volume and clarity.

In addition, AI-powered voice biomarkers provide a promising, noninvasive tool that
can detect small changes in vocal function, including changes connected to the hormonal
fluctuations caused by menopause.

“What needs to be done in the future is more research and more collaboration with
gynecologists,” Dr. Bensoussan said. “And hopefully there will be more awareness to
refer patients with these symptoms to a voice specialist, rather than saying, ‘Oh,
it’s normal, don’t worry.’ And we need more research to understand at what level does
giving hormones help the voice — and who should we give them to?”

Dr. Bensoussan, also an assistant professor in Otolaryngology in the Morsani College
of Medicine, is conducting research funded by a National Institutes of Health grant
that has focused on creating a database of human voices of people with a variety of health disorders and
conditions. Researchers are using artificial intelligence to analyze the data in order to determine
whether differences in the voice may be biomarkers that reveal the presence of different
diseases.

During her work seeing patients at the Voice Center, Dr. Bensoussan began to notice a curious trend.

“I was seeing a lot of middle-aged women just around menopause age, and they were
coming in with very specific symptoms of rough voices, and dry coughs,” she said.
“When we looked at their vocal cords with the little camera, we didn’t see anything
abnormal. As a surgeon, I like to see something I can fix or remove. But these women
just had tired voices, and that’s when I got really interested in the potential affect
of hormones and what those do to change the voice.”

Dr. Bensoussan was intrigued that one of her patients, a singer, informed her that
her vocal teacher could tell when she was having her period because her voice sounded
different.

“Often these women — like many in women’s health — are dismissed and told ‘Oh, it’s
reflux, oh it’s laryngitis, oh it’s nothing,’ and some women are relieved it’s not
serious like cancer so they’re happy and go no further with it,” she explained. “But
a lot of these voice professionals are being dismissed because there’s not enough
understanding that hormones have a huge impact on the voice.”

Dr. Bensoussan was drawn further into the issue due to the practice of treating menopausal
women with hormonal therapy that involves testosterone, to counter balance the decrease
in estrogen and progesterone.

“Unfortunately, testosterone is a male hormone and one of the side effects is a ‘more
masculine’ voice,” she said. “And these women are not counseled for that. So they
get to my office and, I can tell within two seconds of speaking with them what’s going
on. I ask if they’re on testosterone, and they say, ‘Yes,’ and it’s really terrible
for them. Many cry and say they were never told that it would affect their voice.”

Around the same time, her Northeastern colleague Dr. Patel shared that she had noticed
her own voice change and had also heard from peers and friends in perimenopause who
were debilitated by voice, sleep and focus issues.

“She was like, ‘This is crazy, but now I really understand the symptoms,’ ” said Dr.
Bensoussan. “So I met her and got interested in learning more.”

The idea to do a study crystalized when she received an email from a Dallas gynecologist,
Cheryl Kinney, MD, who had heard about Dr. Bensoussan’s voice research. Dr. Kinney
also worked with many women, including singers, going through menopause and experiencing
vocal problems. She invited Dr. Bensoussan to speak on the topic at a well-attended
Menopause Society event in Chicago and the crowd was riveted. “I think it’s because
they were surprised,” Dr. Bensoussan said. “They didn’t understand or appreciate the
effect of hormones on the voice.”

That spurred Dr. Bensoussan to undertake the study, which also included Northeastern’s
Dr. Patel serving as senior author. Among their conclusions: AI-powered voice biomarkers
provide a promising, noninvasive tool that can detect small changes in vocal function
— including changes connected to the hormonal fluctuations caused by menopause.

“What needs to be done in the future is more research and more collaboration with
gynecologists,” Dr. Bensoussan said. “And hopefully there will be more awareness to
refer patients with these symptoms to a voice specialist, rather than saying, ‘Oh,
it’s normal, don’t worry.’ And we need more research to understand at what level does
giving hormones help the voice — and who should we give them to?”

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