| Literature DB >> 29713446 |
François D H Gould1, Andrew Gross1, Rebecca Z German1, Jason R Richardson2.
Abstract
Swallowing disorders in Parkinson's disease are not responsive to dopamine depletion therapy and contribute to morbidity. They are poorly understood owing to a lack of adequate models. We present the first evidence of oropharyngeal changes in a rotenone toxicity model of Parkinson's disease. Rats were recorded while feeding before and after daily rotenone injections at two different doses (2.75 mg/kg and 3 mg/kg). The higher dose had a much more severe parkinsonian phenotype than the low dose. Timing and amplitude of chewing changed, as did the coordination of chewing and swallowing. Dose-dependent effects were evident. These preliminary results indicate that future research in toxicological models of Parkinson's disease should incorporate the study of oropharyngeal dysfunction. A better understanding of nongenetic models of Parkinson's disease in feeding may open new avenues for research into the neurological and behavioral bases for swallowing dysfunction in Parkinson's disease.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29713446 PMCID: PMC5866867 DOI: 10.1155/2018/6537072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Figure 1Videofluroscopic still from marker-tracking software, showing marker positions. PostPal: posterior palate; AntPal: anterior palate; Tongue: tongue; Mandible: mandible.
Variables measured in this study: chewing variables.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| Mandible: dorsoventral range | Within a chewing cycle, maximum distance travelled in the dorsoventral ( |
| Mandible: rostrocaudal range | Within a chewing cycle, maximum distance travelled in the rostrocaudal ( |
| Duration of chewing cycle | Time elapsed from maximum gape to maximum gape. |
| Duration of jaw closing | Time elapsed from maximum gape to mimimum gape within a cycle. |
| Duration of power stroke | Time from minimum gape to rostralmost position of the mandible. |
| Tongue: dorsoventral range | Within a chewing cycle, maximum distance travelled in the dorsoventral ( |
| Tongue: rostrocaudal range | Within a chewing cycle, maximum distance travelled in the rostrocaudal ( |
| Time of tongue rostralmost position | Time from beginning of chewing cycle to tongue reaching its rostralmost position. |
| Relative timing of tongue and jaw | Time from the mandible reaching occlusion to the tongue reaching its rostralmost position. |
Variables measured in this study: swallowing variables.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| Pharyngeal transit time | Time from first frame of movement of the bolus into the oropharynx to when the tail of the bolus passes the level of cervical vertebra 4. |
| Interswallow interval | Time between the onset of two consecutive swallows. |
| Swallow rate | Ratio of number of swallows to duration of feeding bout. |
| Swallow onset delay | Time between maximum gape of previous jaw cycle and onset of swallow inserted within that cycle. Categorised by jaw cycle type (chewing or biting/ingestion). |
Figure 2Boxplots of the chewing variables for which significant injection or injection-dose interactions were found. Stars indicate pairwise differences that were significant (p < 0.005). n=188 chew cycles. C: preinjection measurements and L: last day postinjection measurements.
Figure 3Boxplot and doplot of tongue and swallowing variables for which significant injection or injection-dose interactions were found. Stars indicate significant pairwise differences (p < 0.05). n=188 chews (time of tongue rostralmost position). n=199 swallows (interswallow interval). n=20 sequences (swallow rate). C: preinjection measurements, L: last day postinjection measurements.