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Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease

BACKGROUND: Chagas’ disease causes dysphagia, regurgitation and retention of food in the esophageal body. Patients have longer pharyngeal clearance, which might be consequent of the involvement of the central nervous system or an adaptation to the esophageal transit impairment. If there is central n...

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Autores principales: Dantas, Roberto Oliveira, dos Santos, Carla Manfredi, de Aguiar Cassiani, Rachel, do Nascimento, Weslania Viviane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elmer Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5074809/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27785241
http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/gr574w
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author Dantas, Roberto Oliveira
dos Santos, Carla Manfredi
de Aguiar Cassiani, Rachel
do Nascimento, Weslania Viviane
author_facet Dantas, Roberto Oliveira
dos Santos, Carla Manfredi
de Aguiar Cassiani, Rachel
do Nascimento, Weslania Viviane
author_sort Dantas, Roberto Oliveira
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Chagas’ disease causes dysphagia, regurgitation and retention of food in the esophageal body. Patients have longer pharyngeal clearance, which might be consequent of the involvement of the central nervous system or an adaptation to the esophageal transit impairment. If there is central nervous system involvement by the disease, we expect a larger difference in the oral and pharyngeal phases of swallowing between two consecutive swallows than that seen in controls. Our objective was to evaluate the difference of oral and pharyngeal transit duration between two consecutive swallows in patients with Chagas’ disease compared with controls. METHODS: By videofluoroscopy, the duration of oral and pharyngeal transit, pharyngeal clearance, upper esophageal sphincter transit, hyoid movement and oropharyngeal transit was measured in 17 patients with Chagas’ disease and 15 asymptomatic volunteers. Each subject swallowed in duplicate and in sequence 5 mL and 10 mL of barium liquid and 5 mL and 10 mL of barium paste boluses. The differences were calculated between the two swallows of each volume and consistency in patients and controls. RESULTS: There were no differences between controls and patients in the values of the differences between the two consecutive swallows, except for the hyoid movement duration of the 5 mL liquid bolus, causing a higher difference in controls than in patients. CONCLUSION: Oral and pharyngeal transit variation between two consecutive swallows is similar between patients with Chagas’ disease and controls, which suggests that the longer pharyngeal clearance duration previously described is not a consequence of impairment of the central nervous system control of swallowing.
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spelling pubmed-50748092016-10-26 Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease Dantas, Roberto Oliveira dos Santos, Carla Manfredi de Aguiar Cassiani, Rachel do Nascimento, Weslania Viviane Gastroenterology Res Original Article BACKGROUND: Chagas’ disease causes dysphagia, regurgitation and retention of food in the esophageal body. Patients have longer pharyngeal clearance, which might be consequent of the involvement of the central nervous system or an adaptation to the esophageal transit impairment. If there is central nervous system involvement by the disease, we expect a larger difference in the oral and pharyngeal phases of swallowing between two consecutive swallows than that seen in controls. Our objective was to evaluate the difference of oral and pharyngeal transit duration between two consecutive swallows in patients with Chagas’ disease compared with controls. METHODS: By videofluoroscopy, the duration of oral and pharyngeal transit, pharyngeal clearance, upper esophageal sphincter transit, hyoid movement and oropharyngeal transit was measured in 17 patients with Chagas’ disease and 15 asymptomatic volunteers. Each subject swallowed in duplicate and in sequence 5 mL and 10 mL of barium liquid and 5 mL and 10 mL of barium paste boluses. The differences were calculated between the two swallows of each volume and consistency in patients and controls. RESULTS: There were no differences between controls and patients in the values of the differences between the two consecutive swallows, except for the hyoid movement duration of the 5 mL liquid bolus, causing a higher difference in controls than in patients. CONCLUSION: Oral and pharyngeal transit variation between two consecutive swallows is similar between patients with Chagas’ disease and controls, which suggests that the longer pharyngeal clearance duration previously described is not a consequence of impairment of the central nervous system control of swallowing. Elmer Press 2013-08 2013-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5074809/ /pubmed/27785241 http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/gr574w Text en Copyright 2013, Dantas et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ 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 work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Dantas, Roberto Oliveira
dos Santos, Carla Manfredi
de Aguiar Cassiani, Rachel
do Nascimento, Weslania Viviane
Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease
title Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease
title_full Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease
title_fullStr Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease
title_full_unstemmed Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease
title_short Variability of Oral and Pharyngeal Transit Between Two Consecutive Swallows in Chagas’ Disease
title_sort variability of oral and pharyngeal transit between two consecutive swallows in chagas’ disease
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5074809/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27785241
http://dx.doi.org/10.4021/gr574w
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