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Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study

OBJECTIVE: Current neuroimaging research on functional disturbances provides growing evidence for objective neuronal correlates of allegedly psychogenic symptoms, thereby shifting the disease concept from a psychological towards a neurobiological model. Functional dysphagia is such a rare condition,...

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Autores principales: Suntrup, Sonja, Teismann, Inga, Wollbrink, Andreas, Warnecke, Tobias, Winkels, Martin, Pantev, Christo, Dziewas, Rainer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929717/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586948
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089665
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author Suntrup, Sonja
Teismann, Inga
Wollbrink, Andreas
Warnecke, Tobias
Winkels, Martin
Pantev, Christo
Dziewas, Rainer
author_facet Suntrup, Sonja
Teismann, Inga
Wollbrink, Andreas
Warnecke, Tobias
Winkels, Martin
Pantev, Christo
Dziewas, Rainer
author_sort Suntrup, Sonja
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Current neuroimaging research on functional disturbances provides growing evidence for objective neuronal correlates of allegedly psychogenic symptoms, thereby shifting the disease concept from a psychological towards a neurobiological model. Functional dysphagia is such a rare condition, whose pathogenetic mechanism is largely unknown. In the absence of any organic reason for a patient's persistent swallowing complaints, sensorimotor processing abnormalities involving central neural pathways constitute a potential etiology. METHODS: In this pilot study we measured cortical swallow-related activation in 5 patients diagnosed with functional dysphagia and a matched group of healthy subjects applying magnetoencephalography. Source localization of cortical activation was done with synthetic aperture magnetometry. To test for significant differences in cortical swallowing processing between groups, a non-parametric permutation test was afterwards performed on individual source localization maps. RESULTS: Swallowing task performance was comparable between groups. In relation to control subjects, in whom activation was symmetrically distributed in rostro-medial parts of the sensorimotor cortices of both hemispheres, patients showed prominent activation of the right insula, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and lateral premotor, motor as well as inferolateral parietal cortex. Furthermore, activation was markedly reduced in the left medial primary sensory cortex as well as right medial sensorimotor cortex and adjacent supplementary motor area (p<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Functional dysphagia - a condition with assumed normal brain function - seems to be associated with distinctive changes of the swallow-related cortical activation pattern. Alterations may reflect exaggerated activation of a widely distributed vigilance, self-monitoring and salience rating network that interferes with down-stream deglutition sensorimotor control.
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spelling pubmed-39297172014-02-25 Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study Suntrup, Sonja Teismann, Inga Wollbrink, Andreas Warnecke, Tobias Winkels, Martin Pantev, Christo Dziewas, Rainer PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Current neuroimaging research on functional disturbances provides growing evidence for objective neuronal correlates of allegedly psychogenic symptoms, thereby shifting the disease concept from a psychological towards a neurobiological model. Functional dysphagia is such a rare condition, whose pathogenetic mechanism is largely unknown. In the absence of any organic reason for a patient's persistent swallowing complaints, sensorimotor processing abnormalities involving central neural pathways constitute a potential etiology. METHODS: In this pilot study we measured cortical swallow-related activation in 5 patients diagnosed with functional dysphagia and a matched group of healthy subjects applying magnetoencephalography. Source localization of cortical activation was done with synthetic aperture magnetometry. To test for significant differences in cortical swallowing processing between groups, a non-parametric permutation test was afterwards performed on individual source localization maps. RESULTS: Swallowing task performance was comparable between groups. In relation to control subjects, in whom activation was symmetrically distributed in rostro-medial parts of the sensorimotor cortices of both hemispheres, patients showed prominent activation of the right insula, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and lateral premotor, motor as well as inferolateral parietal cortex. Furthermore, activation was markedly reduced in the left medial primary sensory cortex as well as right medial sensorimotor cortex and adjacent supplementary motor area (p<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Functional dysphagia - a condition with assumed normal brain function - seems to be associated with distinctive changes of the swallow-related cortical activation pattern. Alterations may reflect exaggerated activation of a widely distributed vigilance, self-monitoring and salience rating network that interferes with down-stream deglutition sensorimotor control. Public Library of Science 2014-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3929717/ /pubmed/24586948 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089665 Text en © 2014 Suntrup et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Suntrup, Sonja
Teismann, Inga
Wollbrink, Andreas
Warnecke, Tobias
Winkels, Martin
Pantev, Christo
Dziewas, Rainer
Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study
title Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study
title_full Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study
title_fullStr Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study
title_full_unstemmed Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study
title_short Altered Cortical Swallowing Processing in Patients with Functional Dysphagia: A Preliminary Study
title_sort altered cortical swallowing processing in patients with functional dysphagia: a preliminary study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929717/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586948
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089665
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