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Today anchor Savannah Guthrie becomes emotional after hearing her voice post-surgery
Summary
Savannah Guthrie, 54, became emotional when she heard her voice for the first time after vocal cord surgery in December; she has made brief on-air appearances and is set to resume on Jan. 26.
Content
Savannah Guthrie returned to brief on-air moments after recovering from vocal cord surgery and became emotional when she heard her voice at a post-operative visit. The anchor had sought treatment after years of a scratchy, cracking sound and was diagnosed with vocal issues that required surgery. Doctors found damage on both vocal cords, and she underwent a roughly hourlong procedure followed by a period of silence. She has since begun limited speaking during the broadcast and plans to officially resume on Jan. 26.
Key details:
- Guthrie was diagnosed with vocal nodules and a polyp in December, and later a specialist identified a ruptured blood vessel on one cord and a callous from overuse on the other.
- The surgery took about an hour, and she was required to remain silent for eight days immediately after the procedure.
- At a post-op visit she spoke for the first time and became emotional while describing how her voice sounded to her.
- She has attended voice therapy following the surgery.
- During a recent broadcast call-in she said she is on vocal rest but is allowed to speak for five to 10 minutes every hour.
- Guthrie called into the show and later held a dry-erase sign before saying she planned to return to the program on Monday, Jan. 26.
Summary:
Guthrie's first post-operative use of her voice was an emotional milestone and she has started gradual, limited speech during broadcasts. She remains on prescribed vocal rest with short allowed speaking windows, and she is scheduled to officially return to the show on Jan. 26.
