4.4 Article

Increased viscosity of milk during infant feeding improves swallow safety through modifying sucking in an animal model

期刊

JOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES
卷 52, 期 5-6, 页码 603-611

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jtxs.12599

关键词

animal model; dysphagia; infant; physiology; suckling; viscosity

资金

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [R01HD088561]

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Research has shown that thickened fluids lead to substantial changes in tongue movements during sucking in infants, while pharyngeal transit time and movements of the hyoid and soft palate remain unaffected during swallowing. This suggests that sucking behaviors are more sensitive to sensory feedback associated with changes in milk viscosity compared to pharyngeal swallow reflexes.
Infants experiencing frequent aspiration, the entry of milk into the airway, are often prescribed thickened fluids to improve swallow safety. However, research on the outcomes of thickened milk on infant feeding have been limited to documenting rates of aspiration and the rheologic properties of milk following thickening. As a result, we have little insight into the physiologic and behavioral mechanisms driving differences in performance during feeding on high viscosity milk. Understanding the physiologic and behavioral mechanisms driving variation in performance at different viscosities is especially critical, because the structures involved in feeding respond differently to sensory stimulation. We used infant pigs, a validated animal model for infant feeding, to test how the tongue, soft palate, and hyoid respond to changes in viscosity during sucking and swallowing, in addition to measuring swallow safety and bolus size. We found that the tongue exhibited substantive changes in its movements associated with thickened fluids during sucking and swallowing, but that pharyngeal transit time as well as hyoid and soft palate movements during swallowing were unaffected. This work demonstrates the integrated nature of infant feeding and that behaviors associated with sucking are more sensitive to sensorimotor feedback associated with changes in milk viscosity than those associated with the pharyngeal swallow, likely due to its reflexive nature.

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