DeckerMed Otolaryngology | 2021

Swallowing Disorders and Cricopharyngeal Dysfunction

 
 

Abstract


A functional swallow involves the neuromuscular coordination of ingestion and digestion of food.\xa0 Dysphagia is the term for abnormal swallowing, a discoordination of respiration, phonation, and digestion. Swallowing disorders can describe a simple abnormal sensation of swallow or a complex disorder leading to aspiration pneumonia. The most common cause of mortality and morbidity in dysphagia patients is aspiration pneumonia. Additional complications include malnutrition and dehydration. The prevalence of oropharyngeal dysphagia is up to 40% in adults over 65 and increases to 60% in institutionalized elderly. Oropharyngeal dysphagia is common after stroke, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurologic disorders. Patients in high-risk groups and patients with signs and symptoms of dysphagia should be diagnosed appropriately to determine underlying cause and aspiration risk. This chapter will focus on dysphagia due to pharyngeal phase disorders and their diagnosis and treatments.\xa0\nThis review contains 6 figures, 4 videos, 5 tables and 49 references.\nKey Words: dysphagia, swallowing, Zenker diverticulum, modified barium swallow, videofluoroscopic swallowing study, FEES, transnasal esophagoscopy, esophagram\xa0

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.2310/ot.7062
Language English
Journal DeckerMed Otolaryngology

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