Department of Clinical Radiology, University Hospital of Muenster, Muenster, Germany.
Department of Neurology, University Hospital of Muenster, Muenster, Germany.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2017 Jul 1;18(7):635.e1-635.e7. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2017.02.002. Epub 2017 Mar 28.
Sarcopenia has been identified as an independent risk factor for dysphagia. Dysphagia is one of the most important and prognostically relevant complications of acute stroke. The role of muscle atrophy as a contributing factor for the occurrence of poststroke dysphagia is yet unclear.
To assess whether there is a correlation between age and muscle volume and whether muscle volume is related to dysphagia in acute stroke patients.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective, single-center study included 73 patients with acute ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke who underwent computed tomography angiography on admission and an objective dysphagia assessment by Fiberoptic Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing within 72 hours from admission. With the help of semiautomated muscle segmentation and 3-dimensional reconstruction volumetry of the digastric, temporal, and geniohyoid muscles was performed. For further analysis, participants were first divided into 4 groups according to their age (<61 years, n = 12; 61-75 years, n = 16; 76-85 years, n = 28; ≥86 years, n = 17), secondly into 3 different groups according to their dysphagia severity using the Fiberoptic Endoscopic Dysphagia Severity Scale (FEDSS) (FEDSS 1 and 2, n = 25; FEDSS 3 and 4, n = 32; FEDSS 5 and 6, n = 16).
Correlation of muscle volumes with age and dysphagia severity.
Muscle volumes of single muscles (except for geniohyoid and the right digastric muscles) as well as the sum muscle volume were significantly and inversely related to dysphagia severity. We found a significant decline of muscle volume with advancing age for most muscle groups and, in particular, for the total muscle volume.
Apart from features being determined by the acute stroke itself (eg, site and size of stroke), also premorbid conditions, in particular age-related muscle atrophy, have an impact on the complex pathophysiology of swallowing disorders poststroke.
肌少症已被确定为吞咽困难的独立危险因素。吞咽困难是急性脑卒中最重要和预后相关的并发症之一。肌肉萎缩在卒中后吞咽困难发生中的作用尚不清楚。
评估年龄与肌肉体积之间是否存在相关性,以及肌肉体积与急性脑卒中患者的吞咽困难是否相关。
设计、地点和参与者:这项回顾性、单中心研究纳入了 73 名因急性缺血性或出血性脑卒中入院的患者,这些患者在入院后 72 小时内进行了计算机断层血管造影检查,并通过纤维内镜吞咽评估进行了客观的吞咽困难评估。借助半自动化的肌肉分割和 3 维重建容积测量技术,对二腹肌、颞肌和颏舌骨肌进行了测量。为了进一步分析,首先根据年龄将参与者分为 4 组(<61 岁,n=12;61-75 岁,n=16;76-85 岁,n=28;≥86 岁,n=17),其次根据纤维内镜吞咽困难严重程度分级量表(FEDSS)将其分为 3 组(FEDSS 1 和 2,n=25;FEDSS 3 和 4,n=32;FEDSS 5 和 6,n=16)。
肌肉体积与年龄和吞咽困难严重程度的相关性。
除了颏舌骨肌和右侧二腹肌外,单一肌肉的肌肉体积(均数)(除外颏舌骨肌和右侧二腹肌)以及总肌肉体积与吞咽困难严重程度呈显著负相关。我们发现,大多数肌肉群的肌肉体积随着年龄的增长而显著下降,特别是总肌肉体积。
除了由急性脑卒中本身决定的特征(如脑卒中的部位和大小)外,还包括与年龄相关的肌肉萎缩等预先存在的情况,对卒中后吞咽障碍的复杂病理生理学也有影响。