Dysphagia Part 2 Pathophysiology of Dysphagia Based on anatomic site of involvement, dysphagia may be divided into oral, pharyngeal, and esophageal dysphagia.. Normal transport of an i
Trang 1Chapter 038 Dysphagia
(Part 2)
Pathophysiology of Dysphagia
Based on anatomic site of involvement, dysphagia may be divided into oral, pharyngeal, and esophageal dysphagia Normal transport of an ingested bolus through the swallowing passage depends on the size of the ingested bolus and size
of the lumen, the force of peristaltic contraction, and deglutitive inhibition, including normal relaxation of UES and LES during swallowing Dysphagia
caused by a large bolus or a narrow lumen is called mechanical dysphagia,
whereas dysphagia due to weakness of peristaltic contractions or to impaired deglutitive inhibition causing nonperistaltic contractions and impaired sphincter
relaxation is called motor dysphagia
ORAL AND PHARYNGEAL (OROPHARYNGEAL) DYSPHAGIA
Trang 2Oral-phase dysphagia is associated with poor bolus formation and control,
so that food may either drool out of the mouth or overstay in the mouth or the patient may experience difficulty in initiating the swallowing reflex Poor bolus control may also lead to premature spillage of food into the pharynx and aspiration into the unguarded larynx and/or nasal cavity Pharyngeal-phase dysphagia is associated with stasis of food in the pharynx due to poor pharyngeal propulsion and obstruction at the UES Pharyngeal stasis leads to nasal regurgitation and laryngeal aspiration during or after a swallow Nasal regurgitation and laryngeal aspiration during the process of swallowing are hallmarks of oropharyngeal dysphagia
Oropharyngeal dysphagia may be due to mechanical causes, including a variety of developmental abnormalities, head and neck tumors, radiation therapy, and inflammatory processes (Table 38-1)
Table 38-1 Oropharyngeal Dysphagia
Oropharyngeal Mechanical Dysphagia
I Wall defects
A Congenital
Trang 31 Cleft lip, cleft palate
2 Laryngeal clefts
B Post surgical
II Intrinsic narrowing
A Inflammatory
1 Viral (herpes simplex, varicella-zoster, cytomegalovirus)
2 Bacterial (peritonsillar abscess)
3 Fungal (Candida)
4 Mucocutaneous bullous diseases
5 Caustic, chemical, thermal injury
Trang 4B Web
1 Plummer-Vinson syndrome
C Strictures
1 Congenital microganthia
2 Caustic ingestion
3 Post-radiation
D Tumors
1 Benign
2 Malignant
III Extrinsic compression
Trang 5A Retropharyngeal abscess, mass
B Zenker's diverticulum
C Thyroid disorders
D Vertebral osteophytes
Oropharyngeal Motor Dysphagia
I Diseases of cerebral cortex and brainstem
A With altered consciousness or dementia
1 Dementias including Alzheimer's disease
2 Altered consciousness, metabolic encephalopathy, encephalitis, meningitis, cerebrovascular accident, brain injury
B With normal cognitive functions
Trang 61 Brain injury
2 Cerebral palsy
3 Rabies, tetanus, neurosyphilis
4 Cerebrovascular disease
5 Parkinson's disease and other extrapyramidal lesions
6 Multiple sclerosis (bulbar and pseudobulbar palsy)
7 Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (motor neuron disease)
8 Poliomyelitis and post-poliomyelitis syndrome
II Diseases of cranial nerves (V, VII, IX, X, XII)
A Basilar meningitis (chronic inflammatory, neoplastic)
Trang 7B Nerve injury
C Neuropathy (Guillain-Barré syndrome, familial dysautonomia, sarcoid, diabetic and other causes)
III Neuromuscular
A Myasthenia gravis
B Eaton-Lambert syndrome
C Botulinum toxin
D Aminoglycoside and other drugs
IV Muscle disorders
A Myositis (polymyositis, dermatomyositis, sarcoidosis)
B Metabolic myopathy (mitochondrial myopathy, thyroid myopathy)
Trang 8C Primary myopathies (myotonic dystrophy, oculopharyngeal myopathy)