Purpose: The timing of laryngeal vestibule closure (LVC) is important for airway protection during swallowing. However, it is unknown whether the extent of LVC contributes to airway protection. The goal of this study is to validate the extent of LVC via a measure called laryngeal constriction ratio (LCR).
Methods: A retrospective analysis of videofluoroscopic swallows was conducted on 38 stroke participants and 40 healthy controls. The LCR was calculated by deriving a size-normalized area of airspace from a 1) maximum closed laryngeal vestibule and a 2) maximum open laryngeal airspace (at rest). Airway invasion severity was derived via the Penetration-Aspiration Scale score.
Results: Six hundred forty-nine videofluoroscopic swallows were analyzed. A mixed model analysis revealed a statistically significant mean difference between the normalized laryngeal constriction ratios of healthy individuals (mean (m) = 0.003) versus older dysphagic patients (m = .026) (P = 0.001), quantifying less closure in older patients with dysphagia. Additionally, swallows with airway compromise had a statistically worse LCR when compared to swallows without airway compromise (P = 0.001).
Conclusion: The normalized LCR might be a valid fluoroscopic surrogate measure for LVC and, furthermore, airway compromise during swallowing. By investigating spatial measurements in the laryngeal vestibule during safe and unsafe swallows, the LCR provides a direction for further research to allow for critical examination of the physiology relating to closure degree in order to precisely detect and treat abnormalities during swallowing.
Level Of Evidence: 4 Laryngoscope, 130:E190-E198, 2020.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lary.28161 | DOI Listing |
J Voice
November 2024
University of Sydney Voice Research Laboratory, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Electronic address:
Objectives: Previous research has shown that instructed manipulation of the false vocal fold activity (FVFA), true vocal fold mass (TVFM), and larynx height (LH) impacted on voice quality. It is not known whether these manipulations have any effect on voice onset. Vocal Rise Time (VRT) is an objective acoustic measure of voice onset, which has potential as an assessment tool in clinical settings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
November 2024
Toyohashi University of Technology, 1-1 Hibarigaoka, Toyohashi, Aichi 441-8580 Japan.
Although [h] is described as a glottal fricative, it has never been demonstrated whether [h] has its source exclusively at the glottis. In this study, sound source locations and their influence on sound amplitudes were investigated by conducting mechanical experiments and airflow simulations. Vocal tract data of [h] were obtained in three phonemic contexts from two native Japanese subjects using three-dimensional static magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhonetica
December 2024
Department of Linguistics, 118557 University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
The current project undertakes a kinematic examination of vertical larynx actions and intergestural timing stability within multi-gesture complex segments such as ejectives and implosives that may possess specific temporal goals critical to their articulatory realization. Using real-time MRI (rtMRI) speech production data from Hausa non-pulmonic and pulmonic consonants, this study illuminates speech timing between oral constriction and vertical larynx actions within segments and the role this intergestural timing plays in realizing phonological contrasts and processes in varying prosodic contexts. Results suggest that vertical larynx actions have greater magnitude in the production of ejectives compared to their pulmonic counterparts, but implosives and pulmonic consonants are differentiated not by vertical larynx magnitude but by the intergestural timing patterns between their oral and vertical larynx gestures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
December 2024
Department of Physiology, Lovelace Biomedical Research Institute, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.
Intravenous bolus (IVb) injection of fentanyl induces an immediate apnea, but the characteristics of the apnea and relevant mechanism remain unclear. Here, we tested whether IVb injection of fentanyl induced an immediate central and upper airway obstructive apnea associated with chest wall rigidity via activating vagal C-fibers (VCFs) and vagal afferent opioid receptors (ORs). Cardiorespiratory and electromyography of external and internal intercostal, thyroarytenoid, and superior pharyngeal constrictor muscles (EMG, EMG, EMG and EMG) responses to IVb injection of fentanyl were recorded in anesthetized and spontaneously breathing rats with or without bilateral perivagal capsaicin treatment or intravagal microinjection of naloxone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Cell Mol Biol
October 2024
Georgia Institute of Technology, Biological Sciences, Atlanta, Georgia, United States;
The lung is densely innervated by sensory nerves, the majority of which are derived from the vagal sensory neurons. Vagal ganglia consist of two different ganglia, termed nodose and jugular ganglia, with distinct embryonic origins, innervation patterns, and physiological functions in the periphery. Since nodose neurons constitute the majority of the vagal ganglia, our understanding of the function of jugular nerves in the lung is very limited.
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