4.2 Article

Effect of effortful swallow on pharyngeal pressures during swallowing in adults with dysphagia: A pharyngeal high-resolution manometry study

Journal

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17549507.2021.1975817

Keywords

dysphagia; swallowing; effortful swallow; pharyngeal high-resolution manometry; deglutition; deglutition disorders

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This study found that effortful swallowing significantly affects the pharyngeal swallowing biomechanics in adults with dysphagia, including an increase in pharyngeal contractile and opening duration. This suggests that effortful swallowing can improve swallowing difficulties and warrants further investigation in larger clinical populations.
Purpose: Evidence base to support the use of the effortful swallow in clinical populations with dysphagia is currently lacking. This study aims to quantify the effects of effortful swallowing on pharyngeal swallowing biomechanics in adults with dysphagia using pharyngeal high-resolution manometry (PHRM). Method: ManoScan HRM equipment with a 4.2 mm pressure catheter was used. Participants completed duplicate 10ml baseline and 10ml effortful liquid (IDDSI Level 0) swallows in randomised order. PHRM data were analysed using a semi-automated online platform (). Result: Fifteen adults (8 males; range 45-86 years) with mixed aetiology dysphagia (Functional Oral Intake Scale Level 2-5) were included. Median pharyngeal contractile (156.81 mmHg cm s; IQR 80.62) increased significantly (213.50 mmHg cm s; IQR 117.2) during effortful swallowing. Significant increases were also observed in velopharyngeal pressure, mesopharyngeal pressure, hypopharyngeal pressure and upper oesophageal sphincter (UOS) relaxation duration. UOS integrated relaxation pressure (IRP) was not significantly altered with effortful swallowing. Conclusion: Effortful swallowing induced significant biomechanical changes to swallow in adults with dysphagia. Increases in global pharyngeal rigour, tongue base pressure and UOS opening duration were captured by PHRM during effortful swallowing. Further investigation in larger homogeneous clinical populations is needed to verify the physiological effects of this frequently employed intervention.

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