At Sajjad Rehabilitation & Therapy Centre in Patna, we help people with hoarse voice, vocal strain, pitch problems, puberphonia, nodules, and weak or breathy voice. Therapy is planned to improve voice quality and make speaking feel easier in daily life.
The voice may sound rough, raspy, or unclear, especially after talking for some time.
Some males continue speaking in a high-pitched voice after puberty and feel uncomfortable about it.
Speaking may feel hard after a short time, with throat tiredness or extra effort.
The person may sound too soft, airy, or difficult to hear during normal talking.
The voice may crack, strain, or feel tight when speaking, reading, or singing.
Voice problems can affect confidence at school, work, phone calls, and social talking.
We first check voice quality, pitch, loudness, strain, breathing support, and the situations where speaking feels hardest. Then we plan therapy based on the real voice problem and daily needs.
Therapy may include easier voice production, better breathing support, reduced throat tension, safer voice habits, and home guidance so the voice feels clearer and more comfortable.
Therapy helps lower throat squeezing, extra effort, and wrong habits that keep the voice irritated.
We work on voice quality, pitch, loudness, and easier airflow so speech feels more natural.
The goal is better speaking at home, class, work, and phone conversations without overstraining the voice.
We review the voice problem, strain signs, pitch, breathing, and speaking needs.
Simple changes in speaking habits and voice care are started to reduce irritation.
Therapy focuses on easier voice production, better support, and less tension during speech.
Skills are practiced in real talking situations so the voice stays useful outside the clinic.
Early voice care can stop wrong speaking habits from causing more irritation and tiredness.
People often speak more freely when the voice becomes clearer and easier to use.
Voice treatment can help with classroom speaking, meetings, phone calls, and daily conversation.
Therapy teaches habits that protect the voice during talking, shouting, singing, and long speaking days.
We keep voice therapy practical, respectful, and focused on speech that feels clearer and more comfortable in daily life.
Get a clear voice evaluation and a therapy plan based on the person's speaking and voice needs.
A hoarse voice can happen from voice overuse, infection, reflux, nodules, paralysis, or other voice problems. If it keeps happening or is not improving, it should be checked.
Yes. Many people with puberphonia improve with voice therapy that works on pitch, breath support, and easier voice production.
Not always. Voice therapy is often tried first for vocal nodules, along with better voice habits and less strain on the vocal folds.
Yes. Frequent shouting, throat squeezing, talking loudly for long periods, and poor voice habits can strain the voice and lead to ongoing voice problems.
The time needed depends on the cause of the voice problem and how regularly therapy advice is followed. Some people improve in weeks, while others need longer support.
Voice changes should be checked urgently if they come with trouble breathing, trouble swallowing, coughing blood, severe pain, or a hoarse voice that does not improve.