Simulated reflux decreases vocal fold epithelial barrier resistance.

Laryngoscope

Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.

Published: August 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how exposure to gastric reflux impacts the vocal fold epithelium, which acts as a protective barrier but is vulnerable to damage.
  • Experiments using porcine vocal folds showed that acidic pepsin and acid-only conditions significantly decreased transepithelial resistance, indicating that these conditions compromise the epithelial barrier.
  • Despite the functional impairment, light microscopy revealed minimal structural changes, suggesting that managing reflux through treatments like acid suppression could be beneficial for affected patients.

Article Abstract

Objectives/hypothesis: The vocal fold epithelium provides a barrier to the entry of inhaled and systemic challenges. However, the location of the epithelium makes it vulnerable to damage. Past research suggests, but does not directly demonstrate, that exposure to gastric reflux adversely affects the function of the epithelial barrier. Understanding the nature of reflux-induced epithelial barrier dysfunction is necessary to better recognize the mechanisms for vocal fold susceptibility to this disease. Therefore, we examined the effects of physiologically relevant reflux challenges on vocal fold transepithelial resistance and gross epithelial and subepithelial appearance.

Study Design: Ex vivo, mixed design with between-group and repeated-measures analyses.

Methods: Healthy, native porcine vocal folds (N = 52) were exposed to physiologically relevant acidic pepsin, acid-only, or pepsin-only challenges and examined with electrophysiology and light microscopy. For all challenges, vocal folds exposed to a neutral pH served as control.

Results: Acidic pepsin and acid-only challenges, but not pepsin-only or control challenges significantly reduced transepithelial resistance within 30 minutes. Reductions in transepithelial resistance were irreversible. Challenge exposure produced minimal gross changes in vocal fold epithelial or subepithelial appearance as evidenced by light microscopy.

Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that acidic environments characteristic of gastric reflux compromise epithelial barrier function without gross structural changes. In healthy, native vocal folds, reductions in transepithelial resistance could reflect reflux-related epithelial disruption. These results might guide the development of pharmacologic and therapeutic recommendations for patients with reflux, such as continued acid-suppression therapy and patient antireflux behavioral education.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2927501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lary.20983DOI Listing

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