Labeit Bendix, Muhle Paul, von Itter Jonas, Slavik Janna, Wollbrink Andreas, Sporns Peter, Rusche Thilo, Ruck Tobias, Hüsing-Kabar Anna, Gellner Reinhold, Gross Joachim, Wirth Rainer, Claus Inga, Warnecke Tobias, Dziewas Rainer, Suntrup-Krueger Sonja
Department of Neurology, Institute of Translational Neurology, University Hospital Münster, Münster, Germany.
Institute for Biomagnetism and Biosignal Analysis, University Hospital Münster, Münster, Germany.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2022 Jul 28;14:912691. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.912691. eCollection 2022.
"Presbyphagia" refers to characteristic age-related changes in the complex neuromuscular swallowing mechanism. It has been hypothesized that cumulative impairments in multiple domains affect functional reserve of swallowing with age, but the multifactorial etiology and postulated compensatory strategies of the brain are incompletely understood. This study investigates presbyphagia and its neural correlates, focusing on the clinical determinants associated with adaptive neuroplasticity.
64 subjects over 70 years of age free of typical diseases explaining dysphagia received comprehensive workup including flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing (FEES), magnetoencephalography (MEG) during swallowing and pharyngeal stimulation, volumetry of swallowing muscles, laboratory analyzes, and assessment of hand-grip-strength, nutritional status, frailty, olfaction, cognition and mental health. Neural MEG activation was compared between participants with and without presbyphagia in FEES, and associated clinical influencing factors were analyzed. Presbyphagia was defined as the presence of oropharyngeal swallowing alterations e.g., penetration, aspiration, pharyngeal residue pooling or premature bolus spillage into the piriform sinus and/or laryngeal vestibule.
32 of 64 participants showed swallowing alterations, mainly characterized by pharyngeal residue, whereas the airway was rarely compromised. In the MEG analysis, participants with presbyphagia activated an increased cortical sensorimotor network during swallowing. As major clinical determinant, participants with swallowing alterations exhibited reduced pharyngeal sensation. Presbyphagia was an independent predictor of a reduced nutritional status in a linear regression model.
Swallowing alterations frequently occur in otherwise healthy older adults and are associated with decreased nutritional status. Increased sensorimotor cortical activation may constitute a compensation attempt to uphold swallowing function due to sensory decline. Further studies are needed to clarify whether the swallowing alterations observed can be considered physiological or whether the concept of presbyphagia may need to be extended to a theory with a continuous transition between presbyphagia and dysphagia.
“老年吞咽困难”指复杂神经肌肉吞咽机制中与年龄相关的特征性变化。据推测,随着年龄增长,多个领域的累积损伤会影响吞咽功能储备,但多因素病因及大脑假定的代偿策略尚未完全明确。本研究调查老年吞咽困难及其神经关联,重点关注与适应性神经可塑性相关的临床决定因素。
64名70岁以上无典型吞咽困难解释疾病的受试者接受了全面检查,包括吞咽的软性内镜评估(FEES)、吞咽及咽部刺激时的脑磁图(MEG)、吞咽肌肉容积测定、实验室分析,以及握力、营养状况、衰弱、嗅觉、认知和心理健康评估。比较FEES中有或无老年吞咽困难参与者的神经MEG激活情况,并分析相关临床影响因素。老年吞咽困难定义为存在口咽吞咽改变,如穿透、误吸、咽部残留积聚或食团过早溢入梨状窦和/或喉前庭。
64名参与者中有32名出现吞咽改变,主要特征为咽部残留,而气道很少受影响。在MEG分析中,有老年吞咽困难的参与者在吞咽时激活了增加的皮质感觉运动网络。作为主要临床决定因素,有吞咽改变的参与者咽部感觉减退。在线性回归模型中,老年吞咽困难是营养状况降低的独立预测因素。
吞咽改变在其他方面健康的老年人中经常发生,且与营养状况下降有关。感觉运动皮质激活增加可能是由于感觉减退而维持吞咽功能的一种代偿尝试。需要进一步研究以阐明观察到的吞咽改变是否可被视为生理性的,或者老年吞咽困难的概念是否可能需要扩展为一种在老年吞咽困难和吞咽困难之间有连续过渡的理论。