| Literature DB >> 27016216 |
Roger Newman1,2, Natàlia Vilardell3,2, Pere Clavé4,5,6,7, Renée Speyer1,8,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fluid thickening is a well-established management strategy for oropharyngeal dysphagia (OD). However, the effects of thickening agents on the physiology of impaired swallow responses are not fully understood, and there is no agreement on the degree of bolus thickening. AIM: To review the literature and to produce a white paper of the European Society for Swallowing Disorders (ESSD) describing the evidence in the literature on the effect that bolus modification has upon the physiology, efficacy and safety of swallowing in adults with OD.Entities:
Keywords: Deglutition; Deglutition disorders; Kinetics; Review; Rheology; Viscosity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27016216 PMCID: PMC4929168 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-016-9696-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Fig. 1A summary of the reviewing process showing inclusion and exclusion criteria
Fig. 2Prevalence of patients with laryngeal penetration (measured by VFS or FEES) according to the viscosity levels cited in the literature. Note the viscosity-dependent reduction in the prevalence of penetration with maximal therapeutic effect at spoon-thick viscosity
Fig. 3Prevalence of patients with aspiration (measured by VFS or FEES) according to the level of viscosity cited in the literature. Note the overall viscosity-dependent reduction on the prevalence of aspiration with maximal therapeutic effect at spoon-thick viscosity
Fig. 4Effect of bolus viscosity on the prevalence of safe swallows in patients with OD cited in the literature. a the viscosity-dependent increase in the safety of swallow; b the strong therapeutic effect of spoon-thick viscosity. The patient phenotypes in this group varied widely and included healthy volunteers; older persons; stroke patients; and patients with neurological tumour; neurodegenerative diseases; unilateral vocal cord palsy secondary to malignancy, surgery or intracranial causes; and general illness including urinary tract infection, respiratory disorders, heart failure, chronic renal failure and cerebrovascular disease; c various agents were used to modify the viscosity of the fluid boluses in each study, including XG, MS and barium sulphate
Fig. 5This graph shows the mean value of PAS score at each viscosity. We can see that increasing bolus viscosity significantly reduced PAS scores; lower PAS scores refer to less impaired swallowing, whereas higher scores indicate increased risk of penetration and/or aspiration of boluses
Physiological changes in the swallowing mechanism when bolus viscosity is altered, listed in the phases of oropharyngeal swallowing
| Physiological changes | |
|---|---|
| Lingual pressure | |
| Increased bolus viscosity increases the pressure patterns of the anterior tongue (AT) and posterior tongue (PT) muscles | Taniguchi et al. [ |
| Bolus viscosity has the potential to influence tongue movement amplitudes, durations and variability during normal, sequential swallowing in healthy subjects | Steele and Van Lieshout [ |
| Higher amplitudes of tongue-palate pressure in healthy individuals noted when swallowing nectar- (190 mPa s) and honey-thick (380 mPa s) XG-thickened drinks compared with pressures when swallowing water | Steele et al. [ |
| Oral and pharyngeal transit time (PTT) | |
| Increased oral and pharyngeal transit time in healthy volunteers when bolus viscosity increases from liquid (200cP) to paste (60,000cP) independently of bolus volume | Dantas et al. [ |
| Bolus velocity | |
| Speed of bolus transition of a thicker viscosity is slower than that of a thinner viscosity in healthy volunteers | Inamoto et al. [ |
| Mean speed of bolus transition measured in seconds increased with viscosity in patients with head and neck cancer of various origins | Stachler et al. [ |
| Bolus velocity was not affected by increasing bolus viscosity with MS thickeners, but patients with OD showed reduced bolus velocity when swallowing thin and thickened boluses compared with healthy volunteers | Clavé et al. [ |
| Velocity of thick liquid compared with that of thin liquid is decreased in healthy volunteers | Matsuo et al. [ |
| Increased bolus viscosity led to decreased speed of flow into the pharynx in OD subjects | Bisch et al. [ |
| The mean bolus velocity of thin liquid bolus was not changed by increasing bolus viscosity to nectar but was significantly slowed at spoon-thick viscosity using XG (vs. thin liquid) in patients with dysphagia associated with ageing and/or neurological disease | Rofes et al. [ |
| Hyoid displacement | |
| Hyoid excursion decreased with increased bolus viscosity measured by VFS in patients with dysphagia of unspecified origin | Choi et al. [ |
| Anterior and superior displacement of the hyoid was greater for paste than for liquid bolus duringVFS of post-treatment head and neck cancer patients with OD | Zu et al. [ |
| Epiglottic contact | |
| Latency of epiglottic contact was significantly prolonged for thick bolus viscosity compared with thin bolus viscosity | Lee et al. [ |
| Laryngeal vestibule closure (LVC) time | |
| LVC time was not affected when bolus viscosity increased from thin liquid to nectar or spoon thick in patients with OD | Rofes et al. [ |
| Patients displaying penetration or aspiration presented delayed LV closure time compared with those with a safe swallow in all the viscosities tested (thin liquid, nectar and spoon thick) | Rofes et al. [ |
| Increasing bolus viscosity improved the safety of LVC by reducing penetration and aspiration secondary to reduced delay | Clavé et al. [ |
| Pharyngeal delay time (PDT) | |
| Healthy persons displayed significantly | Bisch et al. [ |
| Duration of upper oesophageal sphincter (UOS) opening | |
| Mean flow rate through the UOS for liquid viscosity was significantly faster than paste viscosity in VFS-manometric study of healthy volunteers | Dantas et al. [ |
| The duration of UOS opening increased significantly with increased viscosity in OD patients studied via VFS | Bisch et al. [ |
| UOS opening increased at spoon-thick viscosity compared with thin liquid in VFS of OD patients | Rofes et al. [ |
| The duration of UOS opening did not vary when comparing thin liquid and thick liquid viscosities using a 320-row area detector CT in healthy volunteers | Inamoto et al. [ |
| Duration of UOS opening was not affected by bolus viscosity in VFS results of OD patients | Lee et al. [ |
| Swallowing a thick liquid viscosity resulted in a | Choi et al. [ |
| Penetration and Aspiration | |
| Less aspiration was noted in VFS in patients with dysphagia of widely varying origin when viscosity of bolus was increased using both xanthan gum and modified starch | Leonard et al. [ |
| Prevalence of penetration/aspiration was not affected with thin versus thick honey viscosity x-ray contrast (1,500cP vs. 3000 cP) during VFS in patients with dysphagia secondary to head and neck cancer/trauma, stroke, neurologic disease or other medical conditions | Hind et al. [ |
| Prevalence of airway invasion reduced as viscosity increased when assessed by VFS in patients with dysphagia arising from ageing, stroke and neurodegenerative diseases | Rofes et al. [ |
Assessment of study quality by QualSyst ratings [29] and NHMRC Evidence Hierarchy [30]
| Reference | Kmet score (%) | Methodological qualitya | NHMRC level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bhattacharyya et al. [ | 18/22 (82 %) | Good | III |
| Bisch et al. [ | 20/24 (83 %) | Good | III |
| Bogaardt et al. [ | 16/22 (73 %) | Strong | III |
| Chen et al. [ | 13/24 (54 %) | Adequate | III |
| Choi et al. [ | 21/22 (95 %) | Good | III |
| Clavé et al. [ | 21/22 (95 %) | Good | III |
| Clavé et al. [ | 21/24 (88 %) | Good | III |
| Dantas et al. [ | 19/22 (86 %) | Good | III |
| Diniz et al. [ | 24/26 (92 %) | Good | II |
| Goulding et al. [ | 22/26 (85 %) | Good | II |
| Groher et al. [ | 10/24 (42 %) | Poor | III |
| Hind et al. [ | 13/24 (54 %) | Adequate | III |
| Inamoto et al. [ | 20/26 (77 %) | Strong | II |
| Kelly et al. [ | 16/22 (73 %) | Strong | III |
| Kuhlemeier et al. [ | 15/22 (68 %) | Strong | III |
| Leder et al. [ | 23/26 (88 %) | Good | II |
| Lee et al. [ | 21/22 (95 %) | Good | III |
| Leonard et al. [ | 21/24 (88 %) | Good | II |
| Matsuo et al. [ | 19/24 (79 %) | Strong | III |
| Rofes et al. [ | 21/24 (88 %) | Good | III |
| Rofes et al. [ | 21/24 (88 %) | Good | III |
| Stachler et al. [ | 18/22 (82 %) | Good | III |
| Steele and Van Lieshout [ | 17/22 (77 %) | Strong | III |
| Steele et al. [ | 22/24 (91 %) | Good | III |
| Taniguchi et al. [ | 19/22 (86 %) | Good | III |
| Zu et al. [ | 20/22 (91 %) | Good | III |
aMethodological quality: good >80 %; strong 60–79 %; adequate 50–59 %; poor <50 %