4.5 Article

Swallowing Pressure Variability as a Function of Pharyngeal Region, Bolus Volume, Age, and Sex

Journal

LARYNGOSCOPE
Volume 131, Issue 1, Pages E52-E58

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lary.28667

Keywords

Deglutition; high-resolution manometry; motor variability; aging

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R21 DC011130, F31 DC015706, T32 GM007507]

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This study measured swallowing pressure variability in healthy adults and found that it differed by pharyngeal region, bolus volume, and age, but not by sex. Abnormal swallowing pressure variability may indicate motor control deviations in individuals with swallowing impairment.
Objectives Within-individual movement variability occurs in most motor domains. However, it is unknown how pharyngeal swallowing pressure varies in healthy individuals. We hypothesized that: 1) variability would differ among pharyngeal regions; 2) variability would decrease with increased bolus volume; 3) variability would increase with age; and 4) there would be no sex differences. Study Design Case series. Methods We used pharyngeal high-resolution manometry to measure swallowing pressure in the following regions: velopharynx, tongue base, hypopharynx, and upper esophageal sphincter. Data were collected from 97 healthy adults (41 male) aged 21 to 89 years during thin liquid swallows: 2 mL, 10 mL, and participant-selected comfortable volume. Pressure variability was measured using coefficient of variation. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to assess impacts of region, bolus volume, age, and sex on pressure variability. Results There was a significant region x volume interaction (P < .001) and significant main effect of age (P = .005). Pressures in the hypopharynx region were more variable than all other regions (P <= .028), and pressures in the tongue base region were less variable than all other regions (P <= .002) except at 2 mL volumes (P = .065). Swallowing pressure variability was significantly different in the velopharynx and upper esophageal sphincter regions, with comfortable volume and 2 mL swallows having greater variability than 10 mL swallows (P <= .026). Pressure variability significantly increased with increasing age (P = .002). There were no effects of sex on pressure variability (P >= .15). Conclusion Pharyngeal swallowing pressure variability differs according pharyngeal region, volume, and age but not sex. Abnormal swallowing pressure variability may reflect deviations in motor control in persons with swallowing impairment, and results from this study can be used as normative data for future investigations evaluating swallowing pressure generation. Level of Evidence 4 Laryngoscope, 2020

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