| Literature DB >> 23306568 |
Jayson Junior Mesti1, Michel Burihan Cahali.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Lateral pharyngoplasty manages obstructive sleep apnea through the myotomy and repositioning of the muscles of the lateral pharyngeal wall. Dysphagia after any pharyngeal surgery is influenced by pain, discomfort from the sutures, the healing process and by the adaptation to the changes in pharyngeal structures. Experience with lateral pharyngoplasty has shown that the superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle plays a minor role in swallowing. One of them, the stylopharyngeus muscle, seems to play an important role during swallowing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23306568 PMCID: PMC9446368 DOI: 10.5935/1808-8694.20120033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 1808-8686
Figure 1A: (without medial traction of the palatopharyngeal. Intraoperative aspect of the lateral pharyngoplasty with preservation of the stylopharyngeus muscle. 1: palatopharyngeal m.; 2: buccopharyngeal fascia; 3: stylopharyngeus m.; 4: palatoglossus m.; * crossover of the stylopharyngeus m. with the middle constrictor; (arrow) superior constrictor m; B: (with medial traction of the pharyngeal palate). Intraoperative view of the lateral pharyngoplasty, preserving the stylopharyngeus muscle. 1: palatopharyngeal m.; 2: buccopharyngeal fascia; 3: stylopharyngeus m.; 4: palatoglossus m.; * crossover of the stylopharyngeus m. with the middle constrictor; (arrow) superior constrictor m.
Graph 1Assessing the deglutition difficulty after lateral pharyngoplasty, with the maximum (upper curve), minimum (lower curve) and middle (middle curve) scores assigned by the 20 patients who were assessed in a daily basis.