therapyTimes.com is a daily source for Music, Nursing, Nutrition, Occupational, Pediatric, Physical, Respiratory and Speech Therapy Professionals containing editorials, articles and radiology jobs.

Music Therapy, Nursing, Nutrition Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Pediatric Therapy, Physical Therapy, Respiratory Therapy, Speech Therapy




search site:    
 


home | login | register





  American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology
www.aspo.us



:: New Brain Findings on Dyslexic Children

:: Talking louder depends on verbal cues, internal targets

:: Cancer Patient Finds a New Voice

:: Brain Mechanism Identified for Interpreting Speech Libraries

:: Language That Puts You in Touch with Your Bodily Feelings

:: Dry Mouth Sufferers Find Oasis

:: Study Sheds Light on VCD and Treatment

:: Researchers Explore Approach to Improve Deaf Education

:: Scientists reaching consensus on how brain processes speech

:: Variety of Approaches Help Children Overcome Language Problems

:: Tactile Input Affects What We Hear

:: ASHA Brings Loan Forgiveness for SLPs Closer to Reality

:: Vowel Sounds Affect Our Product Perception

:: Therapy Can Help With Speech Volume

:: A Parkinson’s-Preventing Protein Pathway

:: A Stroke of Genius

:: Research reclaims the power of speech

:: Tissue-Engineering Research Focuses on Vocal Cords

:: Need Something? Talk To My Right Ear

:: Survey: Speech Therapy Helps, But People Who Stutter Suffer Discrimination

:: Quality of Life in Children with Cochlear Implants

:: Say It Again, Sam

:: Calculating consonants

:: Bird Brains Suggest How Vocal Learning Evolved

:: Neural Pathway Missing in Tone-Deaf People

:: Online Resource Launches to Promote Communication Skills for Autism

:: Babies Quickly Overcome Language Barriers

:: Don't Leave Home Without It

:: Speech-Language Pathologist Delivers Therapy Though Telepractice

:: Children’s Hospital Oakland Scientist Characterizes New Syndrome of Allergy, Apraxia, Malabsorption

:: Dementia Study Launched Within the Deaf Community

:: Lowry Speech Therapy Opens New Office for Articulation Disorders and Delays

:: Speak Easy

:: UNT camp provides outlet for children with communication impairments

:: A Loss for Words

:: 100s of babies have benefited from Recently Launched Newborn Hearing Screening Program

:: The Gift of Fluency for the Holiday Season

:: Major Improvement For The Hearing-Impaired With New Hearing-Aid Software Application

:: Language Use Decreases in Young Children and Caregivers When Television is On

:: Innovative Computer Unravels the Science of Language

:: Researchers Discover First Genes for Stuttering

:: Findings Could Lead to Improved Lip-Reading Training for the Deaf and Hard-Of-Hearing

:: Speech and Gesture Mutually Interact to Enhance Comprehension

:: Using Rosetta Stone for Speech Therapy

:: Dyslexia Varies Across Language Barriers

:: New Cell Phone Technology Allows Deaf People to Communicate

:: Doctors Urge Parents to Preset Volume on Holiday Electronics

:: Healthy Language Learning Alternatives to Baby Einstein Videos

:: Research Explains Why Some Stroke Patients Recover Language Skills

:: Speech Problems Could Be Corrected Before Child Learns to Talk

:: Scientists Create a ‘Golden Ear’ Mouse with Great Hearing As It Ages

:: Dysphagia Expert Creates Tool That’s Easy to Swallow

:: Oticon Medical Receives FDA Clearance To Market Bone-Anchored Hearing System

:: No Easy Answers in Evolution of Human Language

:: iPods to Provide Help for Stutterers

:: Screening for Infant Hearing Problems

:: Gene Associated with Language, Speech, & Reading Disorders

:: Research Lays the Foundation for Improving Human Speech

Emergency Medical Record



::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - WI
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - WA
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TX
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - NJ
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - PA
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - PA
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TX
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TN
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TN
::  Physical Therapists | US - NJ
::  Physical Therapy Jobs
By Onward Healthcare
  [more]

   
home :: departments :: association news

Tough to Swallow
06.14.06

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/061406ST


A new study from the University of Chicago establishes that Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) may contribute to pediatric swallowing dysfunction. The study further suggests that GERD treatment may improve the swallowing function in distress.

Infant swallowing is a highly coordinated process. In order for an infant to swallow, intact sensorimotor reflexes must be integrated at the brainstem level. Any changes in this sequence can lead to difficulty in feeding and swallowing which may ultimately lead to aspiration. If an infant experiences swallowing problems and they are untreated, then the child is at risk for malnutrition, dehydration and respiratory problems.

There are a variety of causes for infant swallowing problems including GERD. GERD is extremely common, affecting some 5-8 percent of the pediatric population. GERD is defined as a backflow of acid from the stomach into the swallowing tube or esophagus. Common symptoms of GERD include vomiting, regurgitation, pain and excessive crying or constant fussiness. Symptoms can range from mild to life-threatening.

The relationship between GERD, microaspiration and respiratory diseases is an accepted and frequently described scenario in medical literature. Despite this, the scientific study of such changes, by which a neurologically-intact larynx, which should protect the lower airway, can allow microaspiration to occur, is rarely discussed.

A new study attempts to address that relationship in the study, “Improved Infant Swallowing after GERD Treatment: A Function of Improved Laryngeal Sensation?” The authors are Dana L. Suskind, MD, Penny Huddleston, MA, CCC-SLP, Fuad M. Baroody, MD, and Donald C. Liu, MD, PhD, all from the University of Chicago; Dana M. Thompson, MD, from the Mayo Clinic's division of pediatric otolaryngology, and Mayo Eugenio Litta with Children's Hospital; and Martha Gulati, MD, with the department of preventive medicine and cardiology, Northwestern University, Chicago. Their findings were presented at the 21st annual meeting of the American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology,  held May 20-22, 2006, at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Chicago.

Methodology: The authors hypothesized that laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) has a negative impact on laryngopharyngeal sensation with resulting microaspiration/penetration in infants and children, and that reflux treatment will have a positive impact on swallowing function in these patients. A review of 28 patient records (21 males, seven females) neurologically-intact infants and children (e.g. no evidence of cerebral palsy, seizures, etc.), ranging in age from one to thirty-two months, from two different tertiary-care children's hospitals with evidence of gross as well as micro-aspiration, swallowing dysfunction and LPR, was made. Each child underwent either medical or surgical intervention for control of their GERD. The patients had their swallow function and laryngeal sensitivity evaluated before and after treatment of gastroesophageal reflux.

LPR was treated either with a course of anti-reflux medication or anti-reflux surgery as guided by the treating physician. A repeat Videofluoroscopic Swallow Study (VSS) or Flexible Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing and Sensation Testing (FEESST) was performed at the end of treatment. During the VSS, the infants were positioned in a typical feeding position consistent with their age and development. They were given a variety of food consistencies (thin liquid, thick liquid, puree, soft solid, hard solid) injected with barium. The study assessed all three phases of the swallow from the oral preparatory phase, oral initiation phase and the pharyngeal phase. FEESST is an alternative test to the X-ray test of swallowing that uses a specifically designed endoscope in order to assess both the sensory and motor components of swallowing.

Results: Some 28 patients presented with clinical evidence of dysphagia. There were seven females and 21 males with ages ranging from four to 42 weeks at the time of initial evaluation (not adjusted for prematurity), with a median age of 23.6 weeks. All patients had clinical evidence of gastroesophageal reflux disease which was supported with adjunctive tests; five had an abnormal both barium swallow and pH probe, thirteen had an abnormal barium swallow and two had an abnormal pH probe. All study participants demonstrated varying degrees of swallow dysfunction on VSS and FEESST.

Repeat swallow evaluation was performed from three to 78.1 weeks post intervention with a median of 18 weeks. Whereas the pre-treatment assessment yielded 23/28 (82 percent) patients with aspiration, the post-treatment assessment only showed 14 percent of patients still aspirating, a significant reduction. Correlating with their improved swallowing, all patients who underwent FEESST testing demonstrated a significant reduction in the sensory threshold required to elicit the LPR reflex indicating improved sensation level. In addition, those who underwent VSS demonstrated significant improvement in both pharyngeal impairment scores and swallow scores with a significant reduction, displaying a qualitative equivalent of a change from mild-moderate pharyngeal impairment to basically normal pharyngeal function and from moderate swallowing impairment to mild swallowing impairment. The researchers found that 26 of 28 patients being able to resume age-appropriate, unrestricted diets; these 26 included two of the four who were unable to tolerate any type of oral intake prior to treatment.

Conclusion: The study authors acknowledge that swallowing function improves with maturation, but they speculate that it could also be related to better control of GERD. Their study suggests that LPR may lead to impaired laryngeal sensation with resultant dysphagia and microaspiration. It further suggests that treatment of acid reflux with anti-reflux medication or surgery can reverse the deleterious changes and thus improve swallowing in these children.

Source: American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology


  Have a comment on this article? Send it




AccuMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
[webcast archive]

 
Copyright © 2010, Valley Forge Publishing Group
2570 Boulevard of the Generals, Ste 220, Norristown, PA 19403
p. 800-983-7737 | f. 610-854-3780 | e. info@therapytimes.com
 
Web Award   APEX Award   ASBPE Award   ASHPE Award