www.rmpd.org.uk

You are here: Home > Abstracts > Physiological Measurement > Swallow respiratory patterns and ageing

Swallow respiratory patterns and ageing

Background: Assessment referrals are increasing for unexpected dysphagia, particularly for older people. It is unclear if this is due to more impaired swallows or healthy age-related changes. Swallow respiration coordination prevents aspiration, and may deteriorate with age. Nonpathological features of the swallow in healthy aging and the factors that influence an individual's ability to eat and drink safely need greater understanding. Some changes might predispose an older person to dysphagic complications in the event of an insult such as a stroke. We investigated the effects of healthy aging on resting and swallow respiratory patterns.

Methods: Fifty healthy volunteers (aged 20-78 years) were recruited to have swallow respiration patterns recorded on a computer. Bolus volume and consistency variations were studied: 5 and 20 ml of water and 5 ml of yogurt.

Results: Measurable swallows significantly decreased with age for water boluses. Swallow apnea increased with age (5 ml of water r = 0.433, p = .002; 5 ml of yogurt r = 0.367, p = .023). Independent of age were: breathing out (occurred after 98% of boluses); multiple swallowing (occurred with all bolus types); post-swallow respiration reset pattern (more irregular after yogurt, Wilcoxon signed rank Z = -2.236, p = .025); and resting respiration.

Conclusions: Subtle changes occur in swallow respiration coordination with age. These changes may be compensatory protective mechanisms rather than the result of decreased muscle mobility or reaction times, and not indicative of impairment. Misattributing healthy age-related changes to impairment affects patient care and the use of healthcare resources.

Publication

Leslie P, Drinnan MJ, Ford GA, Wilson JA. Swallow respiratory patterns and ageing: presbyphagia or dysphagia? J Gerontology A 2005;60:391-395.

Contact

Dr. Michael J. Drinnan, Freeman Unit, Newcastle upon Tyne. Tel: +44 (0)191-223-6161.

Top of page

W3C XHTML 1.0 logo
W3C CSS logo
Triple-A conformance icon, W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
Internet Content Rating Association logo

Regional Medical Physics Department, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE7 7DN, UK.
Tel: +44 (0)191-233-6161 E-mail: webmaster@rmpd.org.uk Web: http://www.rmpd.org.uk
By using this site you agree to our Terms and Conditions of Use. Please read our legal page.
Regional Medical Physics Department, a Clinical Directorate of the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
Copyright ©1999-2008 All Rights Reserved. Revised 7 November, 2008.

This Web Site

Accessibility | Feedback | Help | Links | Site Map | What's New |

Our Organisation

FAQs | Find Us | News & Events | Services | Work For Us |

Our Research

Abstracts | Innovation | Publications | What We Do |

Quick Site Search

Advanced search