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Julie Barkmeier-Kraemer, PhD

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Languages Spoken: English

Julie Barkmeier-Kraemer is a tenured professor in the Division of Otolaryngology, Adjunct faculty to the Department of Communication Sciences and DIsorders, and Clinic Director for the Voice Disorders Center at the University of Utah. She joined the University of Utah in June 2014.

Dr. Barkmeier-Kraemer is the clinic director for the rehabilitation team within the Voice Disorders Center (VDC), Dr Barkmeier-Kraemer works with exceptional colleagues to provide interdisciplinary services to individuals with voice, breathing, and swallowing problems. The VDC team and other colleagues at the UofU, BYU and Utah State host the annual Utah Performance Voice Conference held in honor of World Voice Day.

Dr Barkmeier-Kraemer is the Director of the Voice, Airway, Swallowing Translational (VAST) Research Lab. This lab supports funded and unfunded projects addressing normal and abnormal voice, breathing, and swallowing. Current NIH funded projects include “Vascular Connective Tissues as a Factor in Onset of Idiopathic Vocal Fold Paralysis” (R01DC011311, Co-PIs: Barkmeier-Kraemer, Vande Geest), “Physiologic Correlates of Vocal Tremor affecting those with Essential Tremor” (R01DC016838, PI: Barkmeier-Kraemer), “Imaging and Influence of Glottic and Subglottic Anatomy in Healthy and Stenotic Patients” (R01DC009616, PI: Thomson), “Pathophysiology of Voice Disorders Due to Combination Inhaled Corticosteroids in Asthma” (R01DC016269, PI: Tanner). Her lab also recently completed the project, “Sensitivity and Specificity of the Infant and Child Feeding Questionnaire” (co-PIs: Barkmeier-Kraemer, Silverman), with support from Feeding Matters to develop a pediatric feeding disorders screening tool.

Dr. Barkmeier-Kraemer currently teaches the Master of Science in Clinical Investigation (MSCI) Clinical Investigation Workshop (MDCRC 6060-001) supported by the Center for Clinical Translational Science (CCTS). She is the University of Utah ASHA Clinical Education Administrator for speech-language pathology continuing education activities. She currently mentors undergraduate students through UROP as well as graduate students in the master's and doctoral program in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders and Otolaryngology and other School of Medicine resident research projects.

Dr. Barkmeier-Kraemer has administrative and leadership roles through ASHA including as the Editor-in-Chief for the American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology (AJSLP). She is a Board member for the ASHFoundation and recently completed her term as a standing committee member (2014-2017) and chairperson (2017-2019) for the NIH Motor Function and Speech Rehabilitation (MFSR) study section.

Clinical Locations

Surgical Specialty Center

801-587-8368

729 Arapeen Drive
Salt Lake City, UT  84108

Specialties

  • Airway Disorders
  • Swallowing Disorders
  • Voice Disorders

Board Certification and Academic Information

Academic Departments Surgery - Professor
Communication Sciences and Disorders - Adjunct Professor
Academic Divisions Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
Board Certification American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Julie Barkmeier-Kraemer is a tenured professor in the Division of Otolaryngology, Adjunct faculty to the Department of Communication Sciences and DIsorders, and Clinic Director for the Voice Disorders Center at the University of Utah. She joined the University of Utah in June 2014.

Dr. Barkmeier-Kraemer is the clinic director for the rehabilitation team within the Voice Disorders Center (VDC), Dr Barkmeier-Kraemer works with exceptional colleagues to provide interdisciplinary services to individuals with voice, breathing, and swallowing problems. The VDC team and other colleagues at the UofU, BYU and Utah State host the annual Utah Performance Voice Conference held in honor of World Voice Day.

Dr Barkmeier-Kraemer is the Director of the Voice, Airway, Swallowing Translational (VAST) Research Lab. This lab supports funded and unfunded projects addressing normal and abnormal voice, breathing, and swallowing. Current NIH funded projects include “Vascular Connective Tissues as a Factor in Onset of Idiopathic Vocal Fold Paralysis” (R01DC011311, Co-PIs: Barkmeier-Kraemer, Vande Geest), “Physiologic Correlates of Vocal Tremor affecting those with Essential Tremor” (R01DC016838, PI: Barkmeier-Kraemer), “Imaging and Influence of Glottic and Subglottic Anatomy in Healthy and Stenotic Patients” (R01DC009616, PI: Thomson), “Pathophysiology of Voice Disorders Due to Combination Inhaled Corticosteroids in Asthma” (R01DC016269, PI: Tanner). Her lab also recently completed the project, “Sensitivity and Specificity of the Infant and Child Feeding Questionnaire” (co-PIs: Barkmeier-Kraemer, Silverman), with support from Feeding Matters to develop a pediatric feeding disorders screening tool.

Dr. Barkmeier-Kraemer currently teaches the Master of Science in Clinical Investigation (MSCI) Clinical Investigation Workshop (MDCRC 6060-001) supported by the Center for Clinical Translational Science (CCTS). She is the University of Utah ASHA Clinical Education Administrator for speech-language pathology continuing education activities. She currently mentors undergraduate students through UROP as well as graduate students in the master's and doctoral program in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders and Otolaryngology and other School of Medicine resident research projects.

Dr. Barkmeier-Kraemer has administrative and leadership roles through ASHA including as the Editor-in-Chief for the American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology (AJSLP). She is a Board member for the ASHFoundation and recently completed her term as a standing committee member (2014-2017) and chairperson (2017-2019) for the NIH Motor Function and Speech Rehabilitation (MFSR) study section.

Academic Locations

University Hospital

801-585-7143

50 N Medical Dr
Otolaryngology, 3C120
Salt Lake City, UT  84132

Board Certification and Academic Information

Academic Departments Surgery - Professor
Communication Sciences and Disorders - Adjunct Professor
Academic Divisions Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
Board Certification American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Education History

Postdoctoral Training National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
Neurolaryngology
Postdoctoral Training
Doctoral Training The University of Iowa
Speech-Language Pathology
Ph.D.
Fellowship The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
Speech-Language Pathology
Clinical Fellow
Graduate Training The University of Iowa
Speech-Language Pathology
M.A.
Undergraduate The University of Iowa
Psychology
B.S.
Undergraduate Creighton University
Biology/Pre-Medicine

Selected Publications - Journal Articles

Journal Article

  1. Stevens M, Mayerl CJ, Bond L, German RZ, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM (2020). Pathophysiology of aspiration in a unilateral SLN lesion model using quantitative analysis of VFSS. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol, 140, 110518.
  2. Van Stan JH, Whyte J, Duffy JR, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Doyle PB, Gherson S, Kelchner L, Muise J, Petty B, Roy N, Stemple J, Thibeault S, Tolejano CJ (2020). Rehabilitation Treatment Specification System: Methodology to Identify and Describe Unique Targets and Ingredients. (Epub ahead of print) Arch Phys Med Rehabil.
  3. Schiedermayer B, Kendall KA, Stevens M, Ou Z, Presson AP, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM (2019). Prevalence, incidence, and characteristics of dysphagia in those with unilateral vocal fold paralysis. Laryngoscope, 130(10), 2397-2404.
  4. Silverman AH, Berlin KS, Linn C, Pederson J, Schiedermayer B, Barkmeier-Kraemer J (2020). Psychometric Properties of the Infant and Child Feeding Questionnaire. J Pediatr, 223, 81-86.e2.
  5. Suiter DM, Daniels SK, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Silverman AH (2020). Swallowing Screening: Purposefully Different From an Assessment Sensitivity and Specificity Related to Clinical Yield, Interprofessional Roles, and Patient Selection. Am J Speech Lang Pathol, 29(2S), 979-991.
  6. Barkmeier-Kraemer JM (2020). Isolated Voice Tremor: A Clinical Variant of Essential Tremor or a Distinct Clinical Phenotype? Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y), 10, 1-8.
  7. Maryn T, Leblans M, Zarowski A, Barkmeier-Kraemer J (2019). Objective Acoustic Quantification of Perceived Voice Tremor Severity. J Speech Lang Hear Res, 62(10), 3689-3705.
  8. Etter NM, Hapner ER, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Gartner-Schmidt JL, Dressler EV, Stemple JC (2018). Aging Voice Index (AVI): Reliability and Validity of a Voice Quality of Life Scale for Older Adults. J Voice, 33(5), 807.e7-807.e12.
  9. Patel R, Awan S, Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Courey M, Deliyski D, Eadie T, Paul D, Svec J, Hillman R (2018). Recommended protocols for instrumental assessment of voice: American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Expert Panel to Develop a Protocol for Instrumental Assessment of Voice Function. Am J Speech Lang Pathol, 27(3), 887-905.
  10. Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Clark HM (2017). Speech-Language Pathology Evaluation and Management of Hyperkinetic Disorders Affecting Speech and Swallowing Function. Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y), 7, 489.
  11. Behkam R, Roberts KE, Bierhals AJ, Jacobs ME, Edgar JD, Paniello RC, Woodson G, Vande Geest JP, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM (2017). Aortic arch compliance and idiopathic unilateral vocal fold paralysis. J Appl Physiol (1985), 123(2), 303-309.
  12. Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Linn C, Thompson HL, Byrd RS, Steinfeld MB, Hoffmann RG, Silverman AH (2017). Preliminary Study of a Caregiver-based Infant and Child Feeding and Swallowing Screening Tool. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr, 64(6), 979-983.
  13. Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Patel RR (2016). The Next 10 Years in Voice Evaluation and Treatment. Semin Speech Lang, 37(3), 158-65.
  14. Williams MJ, Ayylasomayajula A, Behkam R, Bierhals AJ, Jacobs ME, Edgar JD, Paniello RC, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Vande Geest JP (2015). A computational study of the role of the aortic arch in idiopathic unilateral vocal-fold paralysis. J Appl Physiol (1985), 118(4), 465-74.
  15. Williams MJ, Utzinger U, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Vande Geest JP (2014). Differences in the microstructure and biomechanical properties of the recurrent laryngeal nerve as a function of age and location.LID - 10.1115/1.4027682 [doi]. J Biomech Eng, 136(8).
  16. Salehi A, Barkmeier-Kraemer J (2014). Laryngeal manual therapy as a treatment for impaired production of tahrir vibrato in traditional Iranian singers. Folia Phoniatr Logop, 66(6), 265-72.
  17. Lester RA, Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Story BH (2013). Physiologic and acoustic patterns of essential vocal tremor. J Voice, 27(4), 422-32.
  18. Chandrasekhar SS, Randolph GW, Seidman MD, Rosenfeld RM, Angelos P, Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Benninger MS, Blumin JH, Dennis G, Hanks J, Haymart MR, Kloos RT, Seals B, Schreibstein JM, Thomas MA, Waddington C, Warren B, Robertson PJ (2013). Clinical practice guideline: improving voice outcomes after thyroid surgery. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, 148(6 Suppl), S1-37.
  19. Campbell EO, Samlan RA, McMullen NT, Cook S, Smiley-Jewell S, Barkmeier-Kraemer J (2013). Developmental changes in the connective tissues of the porcine recurrent laryngeal nerve. J Anat, 222(6), 625-33.
  20. Marcus L, Kiernan B, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM (2013). The association of a preschool voice education program with changes in yelling frequency. Semin Speech Lang, 34(2), 103-15.
  21. Roy N, Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Eadie T, Sivasankar MP, Mehta D, Paul D, Hillman R (2013). Evidence-based clinical voice assessment: a systematic review. Am J Speech Lang Pathol, 22(2), 212-26.
  22. Lederle A, Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Finnegan E (2012). Perception of vocal tremor during sustained phonation compared with sentence context. J Voice, 26(5), 668.e1-9.
  23. Lederle A, Hoit JD, Barkmeier-Kraemer J (2012). Effects of sequential swallowing on drive to breathe in young, healthy adults. Dysphagia, 27(2), 221-7.
  24. Barkmeier-Kraemer J (2012). Updates on vocal tremor and its management. Perspectives on Voice and Voice Disorders, 22(3), 97-103.
  25. Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Story B (2010). Conceptual and Clinical Updates on Vocal Tremor. ASHA Leader.
  26. Alexander MJ, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Vande Geest JP (2010). Biomechanical properties of recurrent laryngeal nerve in the piglet. Ann Biomed Eng, 38(8), 2553-62.
  27. Fass R, Noelck N, Willis MR, Navarro-Rodriguez T, Wilson K, Powers J, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM (2010). The effect of esomeprazole 20 mg twice daily on acoustic and perception parameters of the voice in laryngopharyngeal reflux. Neurogastroenterol Motil, 22(2), 134-41, e44-5.
  28. Ciucci MR, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Sherman SJ (2008). Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation improves deglutition in Parkinson's disease. Mov Disord, 23(5), 676-83.
  29. Lowell SY, Barkmeier-Kraemer JM, Hoit JD, Story BH (2008). Respiratory and laryngeal function during spontaneous speaking in teachers with voice disorders. J Speech Lang Hear Res, 51(2), 333-49.
  30. Finnegan EM, Luschei ES, Barkmeier JM, Hoffman HT (2003). Synchrony of laryngeal muscle activity in persons with vocal tremor. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, 129(3), 313-8.
  31. Barkmeier JM, Bielamowicz S, Takeda N, Ludlow CL (2002). Laryngeal activity during upright vs. supine swallowing. J Appl Physiol, 93(2), 740-5.
  32. Stager SV, Bielamowicz S, Gupta A, Marullo S, Regnell JR, Barkmeier J (2001). Quantification of static and dynamic supraglottic activity. J Speech Lang Hear Res, 44(6), 1245-56.
  33. Barkmeier JM, Case JL, Ludlow CL (2001). Identification of symptoms for spasmodic dysphonia and vocal tremor: a comparison of expert and nonexpert judges. J Commun Disord, 34(1-2), 21-37.
  34. Barkmeier JM, Bielamowicz S, Takeda N, Ludlow CL (2000). Modulation of laryngeal responses to superior laryngeal nerve stimulation by volitional swallowing in awake humans. J Neurophysiol, 83(3), 1264-72.
  35. Stager SV, Bielamowicz SA, Regnell JR, Gupta A, Barkmeier JM (2000). Supraglottic activity: evidence of vocal hyperfunction or laryngeal articulation? J Speech Lang Hear Res, 43(1), 229-38.
  36. Barkmeier JM, Luschei ES (2000). Quantitative analysis of the anatomy of the epineurium of the canine recurrent laryngeal nerve. J Anat, 196 ( Pt 1), 85-101.
  37. Finnegan EM, Luschei ES, Gordon JD, Barkmeier JM, Hoffman HT (1999). Increased stability of airflow following botulinum toxin injection. Laryngoscope, 109(8), 1300-6.
  38. Finnegan EM, Luschei ES, Barkmeier JM, Hoffman HT (1996). Sources of error in estimation of laryngeal airway resistance in persons with spasmodic dysphonia. J Speech Hear Res, 39(1), 105-13.
  39. Smith ES, Verdolini K, Gray S, Nichols S, Lemke J, Barkmeier J, Dove H, Hoffman H (1996). Effect of voice disorders on quality of life. J Med Speech Lang Pathol, 4(4), 223-44.
  40. Peterson KL, Verdolini-Marston K, Barkmeier JM, Hoffman HT (1994). Comparison of aerodynamic and electroglottographic parameters in evaluating clinically relevant voicing patterns. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol, 103(5 Pt 1), 335-46.
  41. Gray SD, Barkmeier J, Jones D, Titze I, Druker D (1992). Vocal evaluation of thyroplastic surgery in the treatment of unilateral vocal fold paralysis. Laryngoscope, 102(4), 415-21.

Review

  1. Barkmeier J, Case J (2000). Differential diagnosis of adductor-type spasmodic dysphonia, vocal tremor, and muscle tension dysphonia. [Review]. Curr Opin Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, 8(3), 174-9.

Book

  1. Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Leonard R (2019). Dysphagia Assessment and Treatment Planning Workbook; A team approach (Fourth Edition). San Diego: Plural Publishing.

Book Chapter

  1. Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Louis E, Smith M (2020). Essential Tremor. In Philip Weissbrod, David O. Francis (Eds.), Neurologic and Neurodegenerative Diseases of the Larynx (1st, pp. 205-214). New York: Springer Publishing.
  2. Barkmeier JM, Lyon M (2004). Vascular supply in the vocal folds. In Sapienza & Casper (Eds.), For Clinicians by Clinicians: Vocal Rehabilitation in Medical Speech-Language Pathology. Austin: Pro Ed.
  3. Barkmeier J, Jordan LS, Robin DA, Schum RL (1991). Inexperienced listener ratings of dysarthric speaker intelligibility and physical appearance. In Moore, Yorkston and Beukelman (Eds.), Dysarthria and Apraxia of Speech: Perspectives on Management (pp. 65-75). Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co., Inc.

Video/Film/CD/Web/Podcast

  1. Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Humbert I, Vose A (March 5, 2018). Down the Hatch - The Swallowing Podcast: Expert Rant#2: Be the expert...SLPs can win the confidence of physicians. [Podcast]. Gainesville, FL: Sound Cloud. Available: https://soundcloud.com/down-the-hatch/expert-rant2-be-the-expert-slps-can-win-the-confidence-of-physicians.

Global Impact

Presentations

Barkmeier-Kraemer J, Brodsky MB, Carrara de Angelis E, Elzayat M, Ickenstein G, Kagaya H, Fujiu-Kurachi M, Li H, Van Daele D, Verin E. Dysphagia minimum standards of care: Survey. World Dysphagia Summit, Barcelona, Spain. Global

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