Title: DYSPHAGIA
1DYSPHAGIA
2Esophagus
3Esophagus
- A. Empty tube approx.
- 20 cm in length
- (See Figure 2-4, page 15 in Kahrilas)
4Esophagus (cont.)
- B. Two muscle layers
- 1. Inner circular layer
- 2. Outer longitudinal layer
5Esophagus (cont.)
- C. Muscle Type
- 1. Upper 1/4 striated (similar to pharyngeal
muscles) - 2. Middle 1/4 mixed striated smooth
- 3. Lower 1/2 smooth (similar to gastric muscles)
6Esophagus (cont.)
- D. Innervation -Vagus Nerve
- 1. Meissner's plexus - "submucosal" between
muscularis mucosa and circular muscle layer
7Meissner's plexus
8Esophagus (cont.)
- D. Innervation -Vagus Nerve (cont.)
- 2. Auerbach's plexus - "myenteric"
between circular and longitudinal
muscle layers
9Auerbach's plexus
10Esophagus (cont.)
- E. Esophageal Peristalsis
- 1. Onset with bolus entry through Upper
Esophageal Segment - 2. Moves from striated to smooth
11Swallow Response Neurophysiology
12A. Sensory Input
- 1. Anterior 2/3 of tongue (cont.)
- a) General Sensation - Trigeminal (V)
(Lingual nerve) - b) Taste - Facial nerve (VII) (chorda
tympani)
13A. Sensory Input (cont.)
- 2. Posterior 1/3 of tongue (cont.)
- a) Glossopharyngeal (IX) for Gen. Sensation
Taste
14A. Sensory Input (cont.)
- 3. Pharynx (gen sens.)
- a) Vagus (X) (via SLN Pharyngeal Branch)
- b) Glossopharyngeal(IX)
15Primary Afferent input controlling the swallowing
response is from the Superior Laryngeal Nerve.
(Kahrilas Figure 2-5, page 17)
16B. Motor Innervation
1. Glossopharyngeal (IX) 2. Vagus
(X) 3. Hypoglossal (XII).
17C. CENTRAL SWALLOW CENTER?
1. Medullary Reticular Formation - most ventral
(toward belly) part of the reticular formation
extending rostrally through the pons and midbrain
18C. CENTRAL SWALLOW CENTER?
1. Medullary Reticular Formation
a. Receives sensory input for swallowing from
Vagus (primarily superior laryngeal nerve) and
Glossopharyngeal nerves.
19C. CENTRAL SWALLOW CENTER?
1. Medullary Reticular Formation
b. Receives excitatory motor input from
structures involved in motor control including
the motor and premotor cerebral cortex via
cortico reticular pathway
20C. CENTRAL SWALLOW CENTER?
1. Medullary Reticular Formation
c. Sends excitatory motor output via anterior and
lateral reticulospinal tract
21Schematic of Theoretical Model of Neural Control
of Swallowing
Cerebral Cortex
Corticoreticular Pathway
Dorsal and Ventral Trigeminal Lemniscus
MOTOR PATHWAYS
SENSORY PATHWAYS
Medullary Reticular Formation
Reticulospinal Pathway
Spinal Trigeminal Neucleus and Tract
CN Motor Nuclei V, IX, X, XII Spinal Motor Neurons
CN Sensory Nuclei VI, VII, X
22C. CENTRAL SWALLOW CENTER?
1. Medullary Reticular Formation
d. Only one side of the medullary swallowing
center is necessary to coordinate a swallow
response.
23NOTE CORTICAL INPUT IS NOT NECESSARY FOR NORMAL
SWALLOW RESPONSE (HOWEVER, DAMAGE TO PRECENTRAL
GYRUS HAS BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH ORAL PHASE
IMPAIRMENT)
24- C. Sequence of events from CNS to cranial
nerves - 1 . Appropriate sensory stimulation
activates the swallow center - 2. "...the entire behavior of swallowing
results from activation of the center." (p.
17)
25- C. Sequence of events from CNS to cranial
nerves (cont.) - 3. A bilateral sequence of excitation and
inhibition occurs involving
approximately 2 dozen motoneuron pools
scattered throughout the brainstem.
26- C. Sequence of events from CNS to cranial
nerves (cont.) - 4. Efferent signal activates portions of the
nucleus ambiguous and nuclei of cranial nerves V,
VII, and XII (associated with oral phase)
27- C. Sequence of events from CNS to
cranial nerves (cont.) - 5. Once stimulated, the entire pharyngeal
swallowing response is generated (CN X)
28- C. Sequence of events from CNS to
cranial nerves (cont.) - 6. An apneic pause of .5 to 3.5 sec. accompanies
swallowing. The swallow center inhibitory
influence overrides respiratory centers competing
for access to the same motoneurons.
29Swallow Response Neurophysiology (cont.)
- D. Sequence of muscle contraction events
(observed experimentally, Doty Bosma, 1956)
30- D. Sequence of muscle contraction events
- 1. Mylohyoid contraction (first detectible
action, precedes other muscular contraction by
30-40 ms)
31- D. Sequence of muscle contraction events
-
- 2. "Leading complex" activation
32- 2. "Leading complex" activation
- a) Posterior tongue
- b) Superior constrictor
- c) Palatopharyngeus
- d) Stylohyoid
- e) Geniohyoid
33- D. Sequence of muscle contraction events
- 3. Pharyngeal constrictors fire in overlapping
order - 4. Cricopharyngeal dilation
- 5. Esophageal peristalsis (velocity between 2-4
cm sec)