Title: Spth 365 Dysphagia and Related Disorders: Diagnosis
1Spth 365 Dysphagia and Related Disorders
Diagnosis
- Lecture One
- Introduction, Neurophysiology
2Dysphagia
- Swallowing disorder characterized by difficulty
in oral preparation for the swallow or in moving
material from the mouth to the stomach. Subsumed
in this definition are problems in positioning
food in the mouth and in the oral manipulation
preceding the swallow including suckling, sucking
and mastication.
3Important point.
- Dysphagia is not a disease itself, rather a
symptom or effect of another pathologic condition.
4Incidence Prevalence
- Prevalence number of cases of a disease at a
specific time compared to the number of persons
in the population at that specific time. - Incidence number of cases of disease occurring
at a specific time period compared to the number
of persons exposed to the risk during that time
period.
5- Incidence of reported dysphagia as primary or
secondary diagnosis in Maryland (Kuhlemeier,
1994) - 3/1000 in 1979
- increased to 10/1000 in 1989.
- Is this a true increase in incidence or an
improvement in reported/heightened awareness?
6- 6-10 million Americans with swallowing disorder
in 1989. - Increased to 15 million by 1991 study increase
due to improvements in life-support systems and
increased survival. (ASHA)
7In specific settings.
- Groher and Bukatman (1986)
- 59 nursing home incidence tends to be higher as
population is more elderly and with increased
neuro disease - 25 rehab, 50 acute in the head injury
population - 25, 28 acute neuro/CVA by chart review
- 42 of neurogenic disorders in rehab by chart
review and physical exam - 30 of head and neck resections
- 12-13 of general acute hospital beds
- Of interest when methodology of study relied on
report of nursing impression, incidence figure
much lower (6), indicating lack of training or
awareness.
8- Young (1990)
- Chart review of 225 patients with CVA in acute
hospital. 28 with documented evidence of
dysphagia. - Teasall, etal (1994)
- Chart review of 255 patients with CVA admitted to
rehab. - 21 had MBS. 78 of those with aspiration on
MBS. - 9.9 of unilateral right CVA
- 12.1 of unilateral left CVA
- 24 of bilateral hemispheric CVA
- 39.5 of brainstem CVA
9Speech Therapy role How did we get here?
- Logemann (1974) shared common morphological
structures and involvement of some common
neurological pathways between speech and
swallowing. SL(t)P involved to control for
potential positive and negative crossover
effects of therapy.
10How much dysphagia do we do?
- 1985 ASHA omnibus survey
- 35 of all respondents serve patients with
dysphagia - 1988 ASHA omnibus survey
- 42.5 of all respondents serve patients with
dysphagia - 1995 ASHA omnibus survey
- 51.5 of all respondents serve patients with
dysphagia - dysphagia consists of 14 of caseload across
settings - 1997 ASHA omnibus survery
- 51 of all respondents serve patients with
dysphagia - comprises up to 38.3 of their clinical caseload.
- Specific to medical settings,
- 97.4 of reporting speech pathologists in
residential health care and - 95.4 of those in hospitals, declare that they
work with patients with swallowing disorders
11ASHA omnibus surveys
12What are the controversies
- High Liability Area.
- Can we adequately educate ourselves to address
the issues? - Many older clinicians are self-taughtgreat for
skill development but lacking in knowledge base.
- Can universities keep up with this?
- How invasive is too invasive?
- Endoscopy?
- Now e-stim?
- What will this do to our relationship with
physicians? - We are differentiated from PT and OT at this
point in that we are not a prescriptive service. - Will this change if we continue to venture into
high risk areas, thus resulting in decreased
autonomy?
13- What will this do to the profession itself?
- Some say dysphagia will save the profession in
times of health care reform. - Others say we are obliterating speech pathology
as we know it. - Contributing to splinter professions.
- Is this true?
- Is this bad?
- What about patients with communication disorders
only? - Are they getting lost in the shuffle?
- Should all speech pathologists be required to be
competent in dysphagia. - Can it really be a specialty area or elective as
ASHA now sees it? - Is this feasible?
- Or will the market not accept that?
14Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Birn et al (1998)
- fMRI using method relying on magnetic field
changes, rather than BOLD. - For both speech and swallowing, maximal magnetic
field change occurred in inferior cortical
regions. - Greater activation noted for speech production of
word one - considered by researchers to represent lingual
artifact
15Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Mosier et al (1999)
- fMRI using BOLD technique swallow vs finger
- Swallowing with bilateral activation of
- BA 4,
- primary somatosensory cortex (BA 3,2,1),
supplemental motor area (BA 6), - prefrontal cortex,
- superior temporal gyrus,
- insular cortex,
- transverse temporal gyrus,
- cingulate gyrus,
- association cortices,
- thalamus
- internal capsule.
16Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Mosier et al (1999) cont..
- Bilateral activation but with intra-subject
dominance. - Dry swallow with greater cortical activation than
wet swallowbolus injected into posterior oral
cavity.
17Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Birn et al (1999)
- single trial, event related paradigm with fMRI
- Averaging of multiple single trials
- swallowing, jaw clenching, tongue movement and
speech - localization to the motor cortex inferior to the
region associated with finger tapping - finger tapping localized to the motor and
auditory regions - authors provide little specificity as to
localization, but provide significant
methodological contribution.
18Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Hamdy et al (1999)
- single trial, event related fMRI
- injected water bolus swallow
- increased signal change observed in
- caudal sensorimotor cortex,
- anterior insula,
- premotor cortex,
- frontal operculum,
- anterior cingulate and prefrontal cortex,
- anterior and posterior parietal cortex, precuneus
- superiomedial temporal cortex
- bilateral activation, but with tendency toward
intra-subject lateralization
19Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Zald Pardo (1999)
- PET study of repetitive, volitional secretion
swallowing lateral lingual movement - localization for swallowing
- bilateral inferior precentral gyrus
- primary somatosensory cortex (BA 43)
- inferior premotor cortex in the right hemisphere
- anterior insula lateralized to the right
- cerebellum, lateralized to the left hemisphere.
- Also, putamen, thalamus, temporal gyrus, right
inferior parietal lobe
When comparing swallowing to tongue, foci for
swallowing in right anterior insula more
anterior suggest insula specifically associated
with sequential motor task involved in swallowing
(? Sensory)
20Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
- Hamdy et al (1999)
- PET study, block design
- water swallow via infusion
- Activation in
- sensorimotor cortices (BA 3, 4, 6)
- cerebellum
- right orbitofrontal cortex
- left mesial premotor cortex and cingulate
- right and left caudolateral sensorimotor cortex
- right and left lateral premotor cortex
- right anterior insula
- left and right temporopolar cortex
- left amygdala
- right prefrontal cortex
- bilateral superiomedial temporal cortex
- bilateal precuneus
- right anterior occipital.
21Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Swallowing
22Weakness of Functional Neuroimaging Studies
- Many techniques lack temporal sensitivity
- requires continuous execution of task
- increases oro-lingual, extra-cranial artifact
- Evaluate entire swallowing process
- motor planning execution
- volitional and non-volitional
- sensory feedback
- therefore lack specificity with and results in
many undefined cortical sources
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