4.5 Article

Research Article Pharyngeal Pressure Variability During Volitional Swallowing Maneuvers

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH
Volume 65, Issue 1, Pages 136-145

Publisher

AMER SPEECH-LANGUAGE-HEARING ASSOC
DOI: 10.1044/2021_JSLHR-21-00359

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [F31 DC015706]
  2. Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology -Head Neck Surgery

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This study found that pharyngeal swallowing pressure variability increases during volitional swallowing tasks in healthy individuals. The type of swallowing task and the pharyngeal region both have significant effects on pressure variability, but there is no significant interaction between the two.
Purpose: Within-individual pharyngeal swallowing pressure variability differs among pharyngeal regions in healthy individuals and increases with age. It remains unknown if pharyngeal pressure variability is impacted by volitional swallowing tasks. We hypothesized that pressure variability would increase during volitional swallowing maneuvers and differ among pharyngeal regions depend-ing on the type of swallowing task being performed. Method: Pharyngeal high-resolution manometry was used to record swallowing pressure data from 156 healthy participants during liquid (5 cc) or saliva swallows, and during volitional swallowing tasks including effortful swallow, Mendelsohn maneuver, Masako maneuver, or during postural adjustments. The coefficient of variation was used to determine pressure variability of velopharynx, tongue base, hypopharynx, and upper esophageal sphincter regions. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was used on log-transformed data to examine effects of pharyngeal region and swallowing tasks on swallow-to-swallow variability. Results: There was a significant main effect of task with greater pressure variability for the effortful swallow (p = .002), Mendelsohn maneuver (p < .001), Masako maneuver (p = .002), and the head turn (p = .006) compared with normal effort swallowing. There was also a significant main effect of region (p < .01). In general, swallowing pressure variability was lower for the tongue base and upper esophageal sphincter regions than the hypopharynx. There was no significant interaction of task and region (effortful, p = .182; Mendelsohn, p = .365; Masako, p = .885; chin tuck, p = .840; head turn, p = .059; and inverted, p = .773). Conclusions: Pharyngeal swallowing pressure variability increases in healthy in-dividuals during volitional swallowing tasks. Less stable swallow patterns may result when tasks are less automatic and greater in complexity. These findings may have relevance to swallowing motor control integrity in healthy aging and individuals with neurogenic dysphagia.

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