| Literature DB >> 25358491 |
Ja-Ho Leigh1, Byung-Mo Oh, Han Gil Seo, Goo Joo Lee, Yusun Min, Keewon Kim, Jung Chan Lee, Tai Ryoon Han.
Abstract
The purpose of the study was to investigate the influence of the chin-tuck maneuver on the movements of swallowing-related structures in healthy subjects and formulate standard instructions for the maneuver. A total of 40 healthy volunteers (20 men and 20 women) swallowed 10 mL of diluted barium solution in a "normal and comfortable" position (NEUT), a comfortable chin-down position (DOWN), and a strict chin-tuck position (TUCK). Resting state anatomy and kinematic changes were analyzed and compared between postures. Although angles of anterior cervical flexion were comparable between DOWN (46.65 ± 9.69 degrees) and TUCK (43.27 ± 12.20), the chin-to-spine distance was significantly shorter in TUCK than in other positions. Only TUCK showed a significantly shorter anteroposterior diameter of the laryngeal inlet (TUCK vs. NEUT, 14.0 ± 4.3 vs. 16.3 ± 5.0 mm) and the oropharynx (18.8 ± 3.1 vs. 20.5 ± 2.8 mm) at rest. The maximal horizontal displacement of the hyoid bone was significantly less in TUCK (9.6 ± 3.0 mm) than in NEUT (12.6 ± 2.6 mm; p < 0.01) or DOWN (12.1 ± 3.0 mm; p < 0.01). TUCK facilitated movement of the epiglottic base upward (TUCK vs. NEUT, 15.8 ± 4.7 vs. 13.3 ± 4.5 mm; p < 0.01). In contrast, DOWN increased the horizontal excursion of the epiglottic base and reduced movement of the vocal cords. These results quantitatively elucidated the biomechanical influences of the chin-tuck maneuver including reduced horizontal movement of the hyoid bone, facilitation of vertical movement of the epiglottic base, and narrowing of the airway entrance. Comparing DOWN and TUCK, only TUCK induced significant changes in the airway entrance, hyoid movement, and epiglottic base retraction.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25358491 PMCID: PMC4342518 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-014-9580-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Fig. 1The instructions for the study postures (upper pane). The radiographic difference with each posture (lower pane)
Fig. 2The process and potential errors of the kinematic swallowing analysis. An asterisk represents the potential error in each step, and a dotted line represents a correction of the error
Fig. 3The coordination of the kinematic analysis and the selected anatomical points
Spatial variables for neutral, comfortable chin-down, and chin-tuck postures
| Neutral | Comfortable chin-down | Strict chin-tuck | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Distance at rest (mm) | |||
| Epiglottic base-posterior wall* | 19.70 (3.28)e | 19.38 (4.25)f | 17.89 (3.26)e,f |
| Epiglottic base-arytenoid* | 16.36 (5.00)e | 15.72 (4.90) | 14.03 (4.27)e |
| Hyoid bone-vocal cord* | 36.92 (6.19)d,e | 34.14 (6.73)d,f | 30.78 (7.22)e,f |
| Chin-posterior wall* | 80.66 (7.00)e | 80.19 (8.13)f | 74.67 (8.22)e,f |
| Hyoid bone, maximal excursion (mm) | |||
| Vertical | 11.43 (4.80) | 10.63 (5.21) | 12.02 (4.89) |
| Horizontal* | 12.55 (2.59)e | 12.14 (2.99)f | 9.64 (3.03)e,f |
| 2D | 14.59 (3.43) | 14.29 (3.89) | 13.93 (3.92) |
| Epiglottic base, maximal excursion (mm) | |||
| Vertical* | 13.33 (4.48)e | 13.43 (4.68)f | 15.79 (4.67)e,f |
| Horizontal* | 10.73 (3.97)d | 12.66 (4.52)d | 11.61 (3.72) |
| 2D (Posterior-upward)* | 13.26 (4.71)e | 14.16 (4.91)f | 16.25 (4.38)e,f |
| Epiglottic flip angle, degrees (°) | 111.37 (21.65) | 118.55 (22.32) | 119.68 (31.31) |
| Vocal cords, maximal excursion (mm) | |||
| Vertical* | 21.13 (5.56)a | 18.86 (5.82)a | 19.01 (6.18) |
| Horizontal* | 6.64 (2.13)b,d | 4.69 (1.55)d | 5.32 (2.61)b |
| 2D | 21.84 (6.28)a,b | 19.50 (5.65)a | 19.24 (6.83)b |
2D two-dimensional
* p < 0.01 using a repeated-measure ANOVA
a,b,cSignificantly different at p < 0.05 by Bonferroni-corrected pairwise comparisons
d,e,fSignificantly different at p < 0.01 by Bonferroni-corrected pairwise comparisons
Fig. 4The pooled average trajectories of the hyoid bone and epiglottic base left column. Arrow heads in each trajectory indicate the starting point. The hyoid movement trajectories during swallowing in a neutral (a), a comfortable chin-down (b), and a strict chin-tuck (c) posture are shown. The chin-tuck posture shows a marked reduction in hyoid excursion in the horizontal direction and a slight increase in the vertical direction (c). Right column. The trajectories of the epiglottic base during swallowing in a neutral (d), a comfortable chin-down (e), and a strict chin-tuck (f) posture are shown. The backward retraction and elevation of the epiglottic base is distinctively enhanced (f)
Maximal velocities of the swallowing structures
| Neutral | Comfortable chin-down | Strict chin-tuck | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hyoid, maximal velocity (mm/s) | |||
| Horizontal* | 55.77 (30.45)b | 50.36 (29.90)c | 36.71 (20.37)b,c |
| Vertical | 53.26 (22.88) | 56.11 (25.47) | 60.83 (35.74) |
| 2D | 125.16 (51.12) | 113.53 (43.18) | 104.51 (57.06) |
| Epiglottic base, maximal velocity (mm/s) | |||
| Horizontal | 83.88 (49.31) | 83.44 (45.44) | 77.73 (35.07) |
| Vertical | 72.82 (32.28)a | 86.86 (41.47) | 98.68 (49.02)a |
| 2D | 127.76 (54.28)a | 148.95 (72.51) | 159.16 (73.63)a |
| Vocal cords, maximal velocity (mm/s) | |||
| Horizontal | 28.67 (16.48) | 32.72 (13.53) | 35.29 (25.27) |
| Vertical | 103.76 (44.80) | 90.91 (53.38) | 91.14 (49.16) |
| 2D | 109.10 (42.57) | 101.19 (52.08) | 105.45 (60.56) |
2D two-dimensional
* p < 0.01 using a repeated-measure ANOVA
aSignificantly different at p < 0.05 by Bonferroni-corrected pairwise comparisons
b,cSignificantly different at p < 0.01 by Bonferroni-corrected pairwise comparisons