The primary aim of this study was to investigate the outcomes of two different modes (active and passive) of balloon dilatation therapy on cricopharyngeal dysfunction (CPD). Thirty-eight CPD patients with neurological disorders were recruited between 2006 and 2010. Twenty-one of them received active balloon dilatation therapy, and the remaining 17 received passive dilatation therapy for an average of 4 weeks. The patients' swallowing function before and after the intervention was evaluated using the Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS) and the upper esophageal sphincter (UES) opening was studied with the videofluoroscopic swallow study. Both modes of balloon dilatation therapy yielded improvements in the FOIS (active group: z = -3.767, p < 0.001; passive group: z = -3.472, p < 0.001) and the UES opening (both groups: p < 0.01). Active dilatation showed a significantly better FOIS result (p = 0.028) than passive dilatation for CPD. Both active and passive balloon dilatation benefits patients with neurological disorders but active balloon dilatation is better.
IMPORTANCE Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has the advantage of imaging swallow function at any anatomical level without changing the position of patient, which can provide detailed information than modified barium swallow, by far the gold standard of swallow evaluation. OBJECTIVE To investigate the use of real-time MRI in the evaluation of swallow function of patients with tongue cancer. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Real-time MRI experiments were performed on a Signa Excite HD 1.5-T scanner (GE Healthcare), with gradients capable of 40-mT/m (milli-Tesla per meter) amplitudes and 150-mT/m/ms (mT/m per millisecond) slew rates. The sequence used was spiral fast gradient echo sequence. Four men with base of tongue or oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma and 3 age-matched healthy men with normal swallowing participated in the experiment. INTERVENTIONS Real-time MRI of the midsagittal plane was collected during swallowing. Coronal planes between the oral tongue and base of tongue and through the middle of the larynx were collected from 1 of the patients. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Oral transit time, pharyngeal transit time, submental muscle length change, and the distance change between the hyoid bone and anterior boundary of the thyroid cartilage were measured frame by frame during swallowing. RESULTS All the measurable oral transit and pharyngeal transit times of the patients with cancer were significantly longer than the ones of the healthy participants. The changes in submental muscle length and the distance between the hyoid bone and thyroid cartilage happened in concert for all 60 normal swallows; however, the pattern differed for each patient with cancer. To our knowledge, the coronal view of the tongue and larynx revealed information that has not been previously reported. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE This study has demonstrated the potential of real-time MRI to reveal critical information beyond the capacity of traditional videofluoroscopy. Further investigation is needed to fully consider the technique, procedure, and standard scope of applying MRI to evaluate swallow function of patients with cancer in research and clinic practice.
We investigate articulatory behavior in post-glossectomy speech using real-time magnetic resonance imaging. Our data reveal that listeners judge speech produced by partial-glossectomy patients as atypical when the surgical procedure affected the oral tongue. Speech produced by patients whose procedure affected the base of tongue, however, was judged as typical. We observe that preservation and compensation mechanisms are exhibited by the patients with atypical speech. They preserve appropriate modulation of F1 using tongue and/or jaw height despite inability to appropriately modulate F2 due to the reduced size and/or mobility of the tongue. Further, durational differences between tense and lax vowels are maintained. The preservation of these features serves as evidence in support of a framework within which individual gestural parameters are independently controlled; when achievement of a particular parameter specification (e.g., constriction location) is compromised, the remaining (e.g., constriction degree, activation duration) are unchanged. Compensatory behavior is exhibited when coronal tongue movement has been impeded and is exemplified by (i) production of labiodental stops in place of target coronal stops and laterals and (ii) forming a velar constriction to produce frication in place of the alveolar frication for /s/.
These findings can be used to assist head and neck cancer treatment planning and counseling. Because hyoid measurement methods influence research conclusions, this aspect of design should be considered when interpreting research findings.
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