| Literature DB >> 22237722 |
Laura W J Baijens1, Renée Speyer, Valeria Lima Passos, Walmari Pilz, Nel Roodenburg, Père Clavé.
Abstract
Surface electrical stimulation has been applied on a large scale to treat oropharyngeal dysphagia. Patients suffering from oropharyngeal dysphagia in the presence of Parkinson's disease have been treated with surface electrical stimulation. Because of controversial reports on this treatment, a pilot study was set up. This study describes the effects of a single session of surface electrical stimulation using different electrode positions in ten patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (median Hoehn and Yahr score: II) and oropharyngeal dysphagia compared to ten age- and gender-matched healthy control subjects during videofluoroscopy of swallowing. Three different electrode positions were applied in random order per subject. For each electrode position, the electrical current was respectively turned "on" and "off" in random order. Temporal, spatial, and visuoperceptual variables were scored by experienced raters who were blinded to the group, electrode position, and status (on/off) of the electrical current. Interrater and interrater reliabilities were calculated. Only a few significant effects of a single session of surface electrical stimulation using different electrode positions in dysphagic Parkinson patients could be observed in this study. Furthermore, significant results for temporal and spatial variables were found regardless of the status of the electrical current in both groups suggesting placebo effects. Following adjustment for electrical current status as well as electrode positions (both not significant, P > 0.05) in the statistical model, significant group differences between Parkinson patients and healthy control subjects emerged. Further studies are necessary to evaluate the potential therapeutic effect and mechanism of electrical stimulation in dysphagic patients with Parkinson's disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22237722 PMCID: PMC3528961 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-011-9387-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Demographics of dysphagic patients with Parkinson’s disease and of healthy control subjects
| No. of matched pair of subjects | Sex | Electrode positions | Parkinson’s disease patients | Healthy controls | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H&Y scalea | Age (years) | Age (years) | |||
| 1 | M | I-II-III | I | 70 | 68 |
| 2 | F | III-I-II | II | 64 | 63 |
| 3 | M | II-I-III | II | 50 | 46 |
| 4 | M | III-II-I | III | 80 | 81 |
| 5 | F | III-I-II | II | 73 | 74 |
| 6 | M | II-I-III | III | 57 | 53 |
| 7 | F | III-II-I | III | 62 | 60 |
| 8 | M | I-II-III | II | 70 | 67 |
| 9 | M | III-I-II | III | 70 | 70 |
| 10 | M | II-I-III | I | 66 | 68 |
aH&Y scale = Hoehn and Yahr scale: the range of scores is I–V, where I indicates unilateral involvement, usually with minimal or no functional disability, and a V indicates confinement to bed or wheelchair unless aided [6]
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the electrode positions. Position I = two electrodes horizontally above the hyoid bone (submental region); position II = two electrodes horizontally below the hyoid bone; position III = combination of positions I and II, with four electrodes connected on each side of the midline of the neck
Fig. 2Single frame of the videofluoroscopic recording showing the landmarks used for spatial measurements. The circle encloses four electrodes in position, the small rectangle includes the marked hyoid bone, and the large rectangle indicates the x–y coordinate system
Variables with good intrarater and interrater reliability [15]
| Reliablea parameters in videofluoroscopy | Name | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Temporal parameters | VPJc (velopharyngeal junction closure) | Moment of first contact of the soft palate against the posterior pharyngeal wall (in seconds) |
| VPJo (velopharyngeal junction opening) | Moment of separation of the soft palate and the posterior pharyngeal wall with re-entry of air in the retrolingual space from the nasopharynx (in seconds) | |
| VPJd (velopharyngeal junction duration) | ∆T between VPJc and VPJo (in seconds) | |
| LVc (laryngeal vestibule closure) | Moment when laryngeal elevation results in making contact between the arytenoid cartilages and the underside of the epiglottis (in seconds) | |
| LVo (laryngeal vestibule opening) | Moment of separation of the arytenoid cartilages and the underside of the epiglottis with re-entry of air in the laryngeal vestibule (in seconds) | |
| LVd (laryngeal vestibule duration) | ∆T between LVc and LVo (in seconds) | |
| UESc (upper esophageal sphincter closure) | Moment of closure of the esophagus after bolus transport (in seconds) | |
| GPJo (glossopalatal junction opening) – LVc (laryngeal vestibule closure) | ∆T between GPJo and LVc (in seconds) | |
| Spatial and temporal parameters of hyoid motion | Vertical hyoid motion | Maximum vertical motion during swallowing act (in mm) |
| Duration horizontal hyoid motion | Duration between initiation of swallow and moment of maximum horizontal (anterior) motion (in seconds) | |
| Duration vertical hyoid motion | Duration between initiation of swallow and moment of maximum vertical motion (in seconds) | |
| Visuoperceptual parametersb | Lingual pumping | Preswallow involuntary repetitive tongue movements (5-point scale, 0–4) |
| Piecemeal deglutition | Sequential swallowing of the same bolus (5-point scale, 0–4) | |
| Postswallow vallecular pooling | Postswallow pooling in the valleculae (3-point scale, 0–2) |
aCronbach’s alpha >0.65 or Cohen’s kappa index of agreement >0.60, ICC >0.60
bLower scores refer to normal functioning and higher scores refer to more severe disability
Fig. 3Observed mean LVd (laryngeal vestibule duration) values (in seconds) for each patient (individual lines) per electrode position, averaged over the two electrical current states (current on vs. off). The dots represent the electrical current status (current on/off) per patient and per electrode position. The electrode position as a fixed effect, which can be thought of as an average over patients’ individual lines, was shown to be significantly reduced in position II compared to position III
Fig. 4Observed values of duration horizontal (anterior) hyoid motion (in seconds), marked for both groups separately (open circle = patients and asterisk = controls, solid and dotted lines, respectively) (all data analysis). Note the marginally higher values for the infrahyoidal position (II) for the two groups, detected as statistically significant regardless of the electrical current status (current on/off). Differences between patients and controls were nonsignificant
Random intercept models using patient data
| VFS parameters | Electrode positiona | Comparison between electrode positionsb | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laryngeal vestibule durationc (seconds) | Position I: | Position I versus II: | NS |
| 0.72 (0.03) | 0.03 (−0.013, 0.07) | ||
| Position II: | Position II versus III: | Sign.c | |
| 0.69 (0.03) | −0.05 (−0.097, −0.003) | ||
| Position III: | Position III versus I: | NS | |
| 0.74 (0.03) | 0.022 (−0.025, 0.069) | ||
| Duration horizontal hyoid motiond (seconds) | Position I: | Position I versus II: | Sign.d |
| 1.54 (0.27) | −0.737 (−1.288, −0.186) | ||
| Position II: | Position II versus III: | NS | |
| 2.27 (0.28) | 0.488 (−0.139, 1.116) | ||
| Position III: | Position III versus I: | NS | |
| 1.78 (0.33) | 0.248 (−0.379, 0.876) | ||
Significant VFS parameters and the estimated means plus standard errors per electrode position and the mean differences between electrode positions in combination with the 95% confidence intervals (according to the fitted random intercept models). These VFS parameters show significant differences for electrode position regardless of the electrical current status (current on/off)
aValues are mean (standard error)
bValues are mean difference (95% CI)
cStatistically significant pairwise difference between II and III
dStatistically significant pairwise difference between I and II
Random intercept models using all data (patients and healthy control subjects)
| VFS parameters | Group | Mean (standard error) | Mean difference between patients and controls (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Velopharyngeal junction closure (seconds) | Patients | 0.054 (0.03) | 0.059 (0.002, 0.117) |
| Controls | −0.005 (0.03) | ||
| Laryngeal vestibule closure (seconds) | Patients | 0.16 (0.06) | 0.152 (0.024, 0.277) |
| Controls | 0.008 (0.06) | ||
| Laryngeal vestibule duration (seconds) | Patients | 0.73 (0.05) | −0.32 (−0.642, −0.003) |
| Controls | 1.05 (0.05) | ||
| Upper esophageal sphincter closure (seconds) | Patients | 0.87 (0.04) | 0.07 (0.001, 0.127) |
| Controls | 0.80 (0.04) | ||
| Piecemeal deglutition (5-point scale, 0–4) | Patients | 1.248 (0.17) | 0.557 (0.235, 0.878) |
| Controls | 0.691 (0.17) |
Significant VFS parameters and their estimated means plus standard errors for patients and controls separately, in combination with the 95% CI of the mean difference between both groups. In the random intercept model, the data have been adjusted for electrode position and electrical current status (current on/off) which are both not significant
Fig. 5Box plots of UESc (upper esophageal sphincter closure in seconds) showing the nesting of subjects within each matched patient–control pair. For UESc a statistically significant difference is observed between the two groups after adjustment for electrode position and electrical current status (current on/off) which are both not significant