Communication, swallowing and jaw movement can all be affected by head and neck cancer and some of the treatments you may receive for this.
Speech and language therapists can help prepare you for your treatment (prehabilitation) by talking to you about this and providing advice and/or exercises before you start treatment.
We also provide assessment, investigations and support during and after your treatment.
We can see you when you attend your Head and Neck Clinic appointments, as an inpatient or outpatient and through Telehealth/Video Consultation from your own home.
Trismus is a condition in which someone has difficulty opening their mouth.
Trismus can develop:
Surgery and radiation therapy can injure the tissues involved in opening the mouth. Fibrosis (scarring) can develop as the tissues begin to heal from surgery. Fibrosis can also build up years after radiation therapy. Muscle and other fibres shorten and tighten, which makes it harder to open your mouth. When you can’t open your mouth well, it is hard for your doctor to examine this area.
You may also have problems:
Once trismus develops, it is very hard to treat. Prevention and early treatment
are the goals.
Treatment/prevention can involve regular jaw exercises and sometimes use of a device called a TheraBite. Your speech and language therapist can advise whether this is suitable for you.
A laryngectomy is the surgical removal of the voice box (larynx) as a treatment for cancer.
After the surgery you will speak and breathe in a different way.
There will be lots of support available from the healthcare team looking after you,
before and after your surgery.
A tracheostomy tube is a small tube that is inserted into the neck that sits inside the windpipe, providing more direct access to the lungs.
It is inserted to help you breathe by allowing a direct route to the lungs, enable suctioning to help remove secretions (phlegm) from the lungs, and stop saliva going into the airway.
Some patients will require a tracheostomy as part of their surgery for head and neck cancer or because of breathing difficulties caused by their cancer before treatment.
Address
University Hospital of Wales
Heath Park Way
Cardiff
CF14 4XW
Telephone: 029 20743012
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