| Literature DB >> 23677389 |
Tiffany Fei1, Rebecca Cliffe Polacco, Sarah E Hori, Sonja M Molfenter, Melanie Peladeau-Pigeon, Clemence Tsang, Catriona M Steele.
Abstract
The tongue plays a key role in the generation of pressures for transporting liquids and foods through the mouth in swallowing. Recent studies suggest that there is an age-related decline in tongue strength in healthy adults. However, whether age-related changes occur in tongue pressures generated for the purpose of swallowing remains unclear. Prior literature in this regard does not clearly explore the influence of task on apparent age-related differences in tongue pressure amplitudes. Furthermore, differences attributable to variations across individuals in strength, independent of age, have not clearly been elucidated. In this study, our goal was to clarify whether older adults have reduced tongue-palate pressures during maximum isometric, saliva swallowing, and water swallowing tasks, while controlling for individual variations in strength. Data were collected from 40 healthy younger adults (under age 40) and 38 healthy mature adults (over age 60). As a group, the mature participants had significantly lower maximum isometric pressures (MIPs). Swallowing pressures differed significantly by task, with higher pressures seen in saliva swallows than in water swallows. Age-group differences were not seen in swallowing pressures. Consideration of MIP as a covariate in the analysis of swallowing pressures revealed significant correlations between strength and swallowing pressures in the older participant group. Age-group differences were evident only when strength was considered in the model, suggesting that apparent age-related differences are, in fact, explained by differences in strength, which tends to be lower in healthy older adults. Our results show no evidence of independent differences in swallowing pressures attributable to age.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23677389 PMCID: PMC3844107 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-013-9469-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Fig. 1Path analysis used to explore the influence of strength, measured using a maximum isometric pressure task, on age group and sex differences in tongue-palate pressures during water and saliva swallows
Fig. 2Illustration of a tongue-pressure waveform collected at the anterior palate, showing how amplitude was measured
Descriptive statistics for tongue-palate pressures (in mmHg) shown by participant age group, sex, and task
| Task | Age group | Sex | Mean | 95 % CI | SD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower boundary | Upper boundary | |||||
| Maximum anterior isometric pressures (MIPs) | Young (<40) | Female | 422 | 395 | 448 | 122 |
| Male | 486 | 463 | 509 | 100 | ||
| Mature (>60) | Female | 343 | 311 | 376 | 149 | |
| Male | 322 | 277 | 367 | 179 | ||
| Regular effort saliva swallows (RESS) | Young (<40) | Female | 120 | 105 | 135 | 69 |
| Male | 158 | 133 | 183 | 109 | ||
| Mature (>60) | Female | 121 | 110 | 133 | 54 | |
| Male | 118 | 104 | 132 | 56 | ||
| Water swallows | Young (<40) | Female | 88 | 77 | 98 | 48 |
| Male | 124 | 102 | 145 | 93 | ||
| Mature (>60) | Female | 89 | 81 | 98 | 39 | |
| Male | 90 | 77 | 104 | 53 | ||
Fig. 3Relationship between tongue strength, measured during a maximum isometric pressure task, and age
Fig. 4Differences in anterior tongue-palate pressure amplitudes for water-swallowing and regular-effort saliva-swallowing tasks
Fig. 5The three-way interaction between age group, task, and tongue strength seen for swallowing pressures