The larynx also plays an important role in how you breathe. When all of the larynx is removed, you'll need a new way of breathing. The surgical team will make a hole in your neck called a tracheostomy. They will permanently connect your windpipe (trachea), which carries air to the lungs, to this hole in the front of your neck. Breathing, coughing, and sneezing will then be done through this hole, called a stoma, rather than through your nose and mouth.
The stoma may be held open with a tube you breathe through. This tube is called a tracheostomy tube, or trach tube. The trach tube stays in for a few weeks, until the skin around the stoma heals. Some people continue to use the trach tube all or part of the time. Or, it can be removed and a smaller tracheostomy button, called a stoma button, can be used instead. After a while, some people don't use a tube or a button in their stoma.
After a partial laryngectomy, a short-term tracheostomy may be needed. Then the trach tube is removed. Over the next few weeks, the stoma closes. You then breathe and speak in the usual way, although your voice may not sound the same as before.
The stoma must be correctly cared for to prevent problems and complications. Your health care team will help you learn how to care for it.