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Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?

Research suggests there are age-related changes in swallowing that do not constitute impairment (“presbyphagia”). The goal of this study was to explore the influence of age on quantitative measures of healthy swallowing by controlling for the effects of sex and sip volume in order to determine the s...

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Autores principales: Mancopes, Renata, Gandhi, Pooja, Smaoui, Sana, Steele, Catriona M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8330408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34350402
http://dx.doi.org/10.21926/obm.geriatr.2101153
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author Mancopes, Renata
Gandhi, Pooja
Smaoui, Sana
Steele, Catriona M.
author_facet Mancopes, Renata
Gandhi, Pooja
Smaoui, Sana
Steele, Catriona M.
author_sort Mancopes, Renata
collection PubMed
description Research suggests there are age-related changes in swallowing that do not constitute impairment (“presbyphagia”). The goal of this study was to explore the influence of age on quantitative measures of healthy swallowing by controlling for the effects of sex and sip volume in order to determine the specific characteristics of presbyphagia. Videofluoroscopy recordings of thin liquid swallows from 76 healthy adults (38 male), aged 21–82 were analysed. Blinded duplicate ratings of swallowing safety, efficiency, kinematics, and timing were made using the ASPEKT method. Hierarchical regression models were used to determine the effects of age, sex, and sip-volume on swallowing. There were no age-related changes in sip volume, number of swallows per bolus, frequency or severity of penetration-aspiration, duration of the hyoid-burst (HYB)-to-upper-esophageal-sphincter (UES) opening interval, time-to-laryngeal-vestibule-closure (LVC), peak hyoid position, hyoid speed, or pharyngeal residue. Significant changes seen with increasing age included: longer swallow reaction time, UES opening duration and LVC duration; larger pharyngeal area at rest and maximum constriction; and wider UES diameter. Male participants had larger sip volume and pharyngeal area at rest. Larger sip volumes were associated with multiple swallows per bolus and shorter hyoid-burst-to-UES opening intervals. These results help to define presbyphagic changes in swallowing that can be expected in healthy older adults up to 80 years of age, and distinguish them from changes that represent impairment. Certain parameters showed changes that were opposite in direction to changes that are usually considered to reflect impairment: longer UES opening, longer LVC duration and wider UES opening. These changes may reflect possible compensations for slower bolus transit. Further research is needed to determine the points along the age continuum where observed age-related changes in swallowing begin to emerge.
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spelling pubmed-83304082021-08-03 Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging? Mancopes, Renata Gandhi, Pooja Smaoui, Sana Steele, Catriona M. OBM Geriat Article Research suggests there are age-related changes in swallowing that do not constitute impairment (“presbyphagia”). The goal of this study was to explore the influence of age on quantitative measures of healthy swallowing by controlling for the effects of sex and sip volume in order to determine the specific characteristics of presbyphagia. Videofluoroscopy recordings of thin liquid swallows from 76 healthy adults (38 male), aged 21–82 were analysed. Blinded duplicate ratings of swallowing safety, efficiency, kinematics, and timing were made using the ASPEKT method. Hierarchical regression models were used to determine the effects of age, sex, and sip-volume on swallowing. There were no age-related changes in sip volume, number of swallows per bolus, frequency or severity of penetration-aspiration, duration of the hyoid-burst (HYB)-to-upper-esophageal-sphincter (UES) opening interval, time-to-laryngeal-vestibule-closure (LVC), peak hyoid position, hyoid speed, or pharyngeal residue. Significant changes seen with increasing age included: longer swallow reaction time, UES opening duration and LVC duration; larger pharyngeal area at rest and maximum constriction; and wider UES diameter. Male participants had larger sip volume and pharyngeal area at rest. Larger sip volumes were associated with multiple swallows per bolus and shorter hyoid-burst-to-UES opening intervals. These results help to define presbyphagic changes in swallowing that can be expected in healthy older adults up to 80 years of age, and distinguish them from changes that represent impairment. Certain parameters showed changes that were opposite in direction to changes that are usually considered to reflect impairment: longer UES opening, longer LVC duration and wider UES opening. These changes may reflect possible compensations for slower bolus transit. Further research is needed to determine the points along the age continuum where observed age-related changes in swallowing begin to emerge. 2021-01-19 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8330408/ /pubmed/34350402 http://dx.doi.org/10.21926/obm.geriatr.2101153 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the conditions of the Creative Commons by Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is correctly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Mancopes, Renata
Gandhi, Pooja
Smaoui, Sana
Steele, Catriona M.
Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?
title Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?
title_full Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?
title_fullStr Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?
title_full_unstemmed Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?
title_short Which Physiological Swallowing Parameters Change with Healthy Aging?
title_sort which physiological swallowing parameters change with healthy aging?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8330408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34350402
http://dx.doi.org/10.21926/obm.geriatr.2101153
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