Aspiration and swallowing in Parkinson disease and rehabilitation with EMST: a randomized trial
- PMID: 21098406
- PMCID: PMC2995389
- DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181fef115
Aspiration and swallowing in Parkinson disease and rehabilitation with EMST: a randomized trial
Abstract
Objective: Dysphagia is the main cause of aspiration pneumonia and death in Parkinson disease (PD) with no established restorative behavioral treatment to date. Reduced swallow safety may be related to decreased elevation and excursion of the hyolaryngeal complex. Increased submental muscle force generation has been associated with expiratory muscle strength training (EMST) and subsequent increases in hyolaryngeal complex movement provide a strong rationale for its use as a dysphagia treatment. The current study's objective was to test the treatment outcome of a 4-week device-driven EMST program on swallow safety and define the physiologic mechanisms through measures of swallow timing and hyoid displacement.
Methods: This was a randomized, blinded, sham-controlled EMST trial performed at an academic center. Sixty participants with PD completed EMST, 4 weeks, 5 days per week, for 20 minutes per day, using a calibrated or sham, handheld device. Measures of swallow function including judgments of swallow safety (penetration-aspiration [PA] scale scores), swallow timing, and hyoid movement were made from videofluoroscopic images.
Results: No pretreatment group differences existed. The active treatment (EMST) group demonstrated improved swallow safety compared to the sham group as evidenced by improved PA scores. The EMST group demonstrated improvement of hyolaryngeal function during swallowing, findings not evident for the sham group.
Conclusions: EMST may be a restorative treatment for dysphagia in those with PD. The mechanism may be explained by improved hyolaryngeal complex movement.
Classification of evidence: This intervention study provides Class I evidence that swallow safety as defined by PA score improved post EMST.
Figures
References
-
- Hamdy S, Aziz Q, Rothwell J, et al. The cortical topography of human swallowing musculature in health and disease. Nat Med 1996;2:1217–1224. - PubMed
-
- Martin RE, Sessle BJ. The role of the cerebral cortex in swallowing. Dysphagia 1993;8:195–202. - PubMed
-
- Mosier K, Patel R, Liu W, Kalnin A, Maldjian J, Baredes S. Cortical representation of swallowing in normal adults: functional implications. Laryngoscope 1999;109:1417–1423. - PubMed
-
- Zald DH, Pardo JV. The functional neuroanatomy of voluntary swallowing. Ann Neurol 1999;46:281–286. - PubMed
-
- Fernandez HH, Lapane LK. Predictors of mortality among nursing home residents with a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. Med Sci Monit 2002;8:CR241–246. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials