Every plan starts with an accurate diagnosis and ends with a restored voice. From conservative therapy to scar-free microsurgery, we choose the least invasive option that solves the problem.
Diagnosis comes first. Videostroboscopy uses a synchronised strobe light to display your vocal folds vibrating in slow motion on an HD screen, revealing stiffness, small lesions and irregular vibration that ordinary endoscopy misses. We pair it with acoustic analysis — measuring pitch, jitter and shimmer — to build an objective picture of your voice before and after treatment.
Many voice disorders never need surgery. Our speech-language pathologists deliver structured voice therapy to retrain how you produce sound, relieve muscle tension, and let nodules and strain-related changes heal. Therapy is also essential after surgery, helping you return to full, confident voice use safely.
Microlaryngeal surgery is a minimally invasive, voice-preserving procedure performed through the mouth — with no external incisions or visible scars. Under general anaesthesia, a laryngoscope exposes the vocal folds while an operating microscope provides a magnified view, allowing fine microsurgical instruments to remove polyps, nodules, cysts and other lesions with exceptional accuracy.
In selected cases, a CO₂ laser is used during microlaryngeal surgery to remove lesions with pinpoint precision and reduced tissue trauma. The laser is particularly valuable for certain pre-cancerous lesions, papillomas and early laryngeal cancers, supporting cleaner removal and quicker healing.
Phonosurgery is a group of specialised procedures designed specifically to improve or restore the voice — rather than simply remove disease. This includes injection techniques and framework (medialisation) surgery to bring a paralysed or weak vocal fold back into position so the folds meet and produce a stronger voice, as well as procedures to adjust pitch.
Good outcomes depend as much on recovery as on surgery. After a voice procedure we guide you through a clear protocol: a period of voice rest to let the vocal folds heal, gradual reintroduction of speech, voice therapy to optimise the result, anti-reflux measures where needed, and follow-up laryngoscopy to confirm healing.
Start with a voice assessment. We'll explain your options clearly and recommend the least invasive path to recovery.