Omari Taher I, Jones Corinne A, Hammer Michael J, Cock Charles, Dinning Philip, Wiklendt Lukasz, Costa Marcello, McCulloch Timothy M
Department of Human Physiology, School of Medicine, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia; and Department of Gastroenterology & Surgery, Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, Australia; and
Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin.
Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol. 2016 Mar 15;310(6):G359-66. doi: 10.1152/ajpgi.00388.2015. Epub 2016 Jan 14.
The swallowing muscles that influence upper esophageal sphincter (UES) opening are centrally controlled and modulated by sensory information. Activation and deactivation of neural inputs to these muscles, including the intrinsic cricopharyngeus (CP) and extrinsic submental (SM) muscles, results in their mechanical activation or deactivation, which changes the diameter of the lumen, alters the intraluminal pressure, and ultimately reduces or promotes flow of content. By measuring the changes in diameter, using intraluminal impedance, and the concurrent changes in intraluminal pressure, it is possible to determine when the muscles are passively or actively relaxing or contracting. From these "mechanical states" of the muscle, the neural inputs driving the specific motor behaviors of the UES can be inferred. In this study we compared predictions of UES mechanical states directly with the activity measured by electromyography (EMG). In eight subjects, pharyngeal pressure and impedance were recorded in parallel with CP- and SM-EMG activity. UES pressure and impedance swallow profiles correlated with the CP-EMG and SM-EMG recordings, respectively. Eight UES muscle states were determined by using the gradient of pressure and impedance with respect to time. Guided by the level and gradient change of EMG activity, mechanical states successfully predicted the activity of the CP muscle and SM muscle independently. Mechanical state predictions revealed patterns consistent with the known neural inputs activating the different muscles during swallowing. Derivation of "activation state" maps may allow better physiological and pathophysiological interpretations of UES function.
影响食管上括约肌(UES)开放的吞咽肌肉受中枢控制,并由感觉信息调节。对这些肌肉(包括环咽肌(CP)固有肌和颏下肌(SM)外在肌)的神经输入的激活和失活,会导致其机械性激活或失活,从而改变管腔直径、改变腔内压力,并最终减少或促进内容物流动。通过使用腔内阻抗测量直径变化以及腔内压力的同步变化,可以确定肌肉何时被动或主动松弛或收缩。从肌肉的这些“机械状态”,可以推断出驱动UES特定运动行为的神经输入。在本研究中,我们将UES机械状态的预测与通过肌电图(EMG)测量的活动直接进行比较。在八名受试者中,同时记录咽部压力和阻抗以及CP肌和SM肌的EMG活动。UES压力和阻抗吞咽曲线分别与CP-EMG和SM-EMG记录相关。通过使用压力和阻抗相对于时间的梯度来确定八种UES肌肉状态。在EMG活动水平和梯度变化的指导下,机械状态成功地分别预测了CP肌和SM肌的活动。机械状态预测揭示了与吞咽过程中激活不同肌肉的已知神经输入一致的模式。“激活状态”图的推导可能有助于对UES功能进行更好的生理和病理生理学解释。