Transgender voice surgery
Transgender voice surgery is a set of surgical procedures used by transgender individuals to modify their vocal characteristics, primarily focusing on raising or lowering vocal pitch to better align with their gender identity. These surgeries alter the existing vocal structure by modifying the vocal folds and surrounding tissues to change pitch, resonance, and overall voice quality.
Overview
While hormone replacement therapy and gender reassignment surgery can cause a more feminine outward appearance for transgender women, they typically do nothing to alter the pitch of an adult voice or to make the voice sound more feminine, unless HRT is started immediately after puberty blockers during teenage years. The existing vocal structure can be surgically altered to raise vocal pitch by shortening the vocal folds, decreasing the whole mass of the folds, or by increasing the tension of the folds. Transgender women can undergo surgery to raise their vocal pitch as measured by fundamental frequency, to increase their pitch range and to remove access to lower frequency ranges in their voice. The current pitch-raising vocal surgeries can be split-up into several categories.Voice feminization surgery
Several surgical procedures are currently used to raise vocal pitch and feminize the voice for transgender women. The following sections describe the main types of voice feminization surgeries and associated techniques used to achieve these outcomes.Cricothyroid approximation
Cricothyroid approximation is a surgical procedure that aims to increase vocal pitch by tensing and elongating the vocal folds. This is achieved by suturing or securing the cricoid cartilage closer to the thyroid cartilage, causing the cricoid to shift backward and upward while the thyroid moves forward and downward. This manipulation mimics the contraction of the cricothyroid muscle, which naturally tenses and elongates the vocal folds, resulting in a higher pitch.However, this procedure often results in patients being locked into falsetto, and outcomes may deteriorate over time. Additionally, patients frequently lose the ability to use their cricothyroid muscle following surgery. Due to these limitations and associated complications, fewer clinicians perform CTA today.
Wendler glottoplasty
Wendler glottoplasty is currently the most commonly performed voice feminization surgery. This procedure raises vocal pitch by shortening the vibrating length of the vocal folds. The anterior portion of the vocal folds is surgically removed, and the remaining edges are sutured together to form a nonvibrating anterior web, effectively reducing the vibrating length and thus increasing pitch.A variation known as Laser Reduction Glottoplasty involves vaporizing the anterior part of the vocal folds using a carbon dioxide laser. The vocal folds are then tensed with sutures, causing an increase in pitch.
An additional variant called Vocal Fold Shortening with Retrodisplacement of the Anterior Commissure, developed by Hyung-Tae Kim in Seoul, South Korea, involves suturing the glottic web downward in the larynx during surgery. This technique provides further tensioning of the vocal cords and helps preserve the funnel shape of the larynx.
Feminization laryngoplasty
, also known as open laryngoplasty or Femlar/FL, is a surgical technique that modifies the voice by removing portions of both the anterior true and false vocal folds as well as the anterior part of the larynx. After resection, the larynx is reconstructed using sutures and hardware to reshape the remaining tissues. This approach affects both the physical size of the larynx and the pitch of the voice.This procedure provides a more significant reduction of the adam's apple compared to the traditional tracheal shave and can also be used to correct complications from previous tracheal shave surgeries that impact vocal pitch. It is commonly combined with a thyrohyoid elevation, which raises the larynx within the neck. Elevating the larynx reduces the length of the pharynx, thereby modifying the resonance of the voice towards typically feminine characteristics.
Despite its potentially greater vocal feminization effects, feminization laryngoplasty is less commonly performed due to its relative novelty, complexity, and increased surgical risks compared to other voice feminization surgeries. At present, only a limited number of surgeons in countries such as the United States, Australia, and Thailand offer this procedure.
Patients undergoing this surgery typically experience a more pronounced increase in pitch and overall feminization of vocal characteristics than with glottoplasty; however, this may not align with every patient's goals. Furthermore, the postoperative recovery period often includes a longer phase of pitch instability associated with the greater surgical complexity.
It is worth noting that some practitioners may use the term feminization laryngoplasty to describe their broader portfolio of voice feminization procedures, even if this specific surgery is not performed.
Laser tuning
Laser tuning encompasses procedures such as Laser Assisted Voice Adjustment and Vocal Fold Muscle Reduction, and is sometimes associated with Laser Reduction Glottoplasty. These interventions involve microlaryngoscopy combined with the use of lasers—commonly a carbon dioxide laser or a potassium titanyl phosphate laser—that vaporize portions of the vocal folds.During healing and scarring, the vocal fold tissue decreases in mass and increases in stiffness, leading to a rise in vocal pitch. VFMR vaporizes a larger portion of the vocal folds, including the underlying muscle, whereas LAVA is limited to more superficial layers making it less invasive.
Laser tuning procedures are typically performed as adjuncts to primary feminization surgeries such as feminization laryngoplasty or glottoplasty because their impact alone is often minimal for typical male-to-female transgender patients, although VFMR may occasionally be performed in isolation. The term Laser Reduction Glottoplasty is sometimes used interchangeably with these procedures, either with or without concurrent creation of a glottic web, depending on the surgical context.
Resonance surgery
Resonance surgery describes surgical techniques aimed at modifying the vocal tract to produce a more feminine resonance and timbre. These include procedures such as thyrohyoid elevation, commonly performed in combination with feminization laryngoplasty, which raises the larynx within the neck, shortening the vocal tract and thereby modifying voice resonance characteristics.Additionally, pharyngeal narrowing surgery involves excising tissue from the posterior pharynx to reduce the size of the pharyngeal resonance cavity, further contributing to a more typically feminine vocal quality.