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The Esophagus


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      Source: Reproduced from Rubesin and Glick [23], with permission.

      A bolus is selected and brought to the lips by volitional activity. A liquid is sucked or poured into the mouth. A solid is placed on top of the tongue. Liquids do not require much oral manipulation and are therefore easily transferred to the oropharynx. Solids must be chewed and mixed with saliva to achieve a satisfactory consistency for swallowing. During bolus preparation, the bolus is contained in the oral cavity in young adults. Older “normal” adults frequently spill the bolus prematurely into the oropharynx before swallowing [12].

      The pharynx and larynx are elevated by the suprahyoid muscles and intrinsic elevators of the pharynx. Pharyngeal‐laryngeal elevation participates in closure of the laryngeal aditus and laryngeal vestibule, epiglottic tilt, and opening of the pharyngoesophageal segment [8].

Photo depicts postcricoid squamous mucosa. Just posterior to the cricoid cartilage, the anterior wall of the pharyngoesophageal segment has redundant mucosa that changes size and shape during swallowing.

      Source: Reproduced from Rubesin [6], with permission.

      The epiglottis acts as a stream diverter, directing the bolus into the lateral swallowing channels. The tilting epiglottis also helps cover the laryngeal vestibule. The larynx closes in a retrograde fashion. The true vocal cords close at the beginning of the swallow, followed by the false vocal cords and the remainder of the laryngeal vestibule. If a portion of the bolus has penetrated the laryngeal vestibule, it is pushed back into the hypopharynx by retrograde laryngeal closure. The bolus flows through the pharynx by a combination of gravity, elevation of the pharynx over the bolus, tongue push, and sequential contraction of the constrictor muscles. Although the upper esophageal sphincter relaxes at the beginning of a swallow, the pharyngoesophageal segment does not open until the bolus reaches the lower hypopharynx. Elevation of the larynx and pharynx pulls the anterior wall of the pharyngoesophageal segment anteriorly. Tongue base retraction, constrictor contraction, and gravity increase bolus pressure to open the pharyngoesophageal segment.

      Neuromuscular disorders

      Most patients with swallowing dysfunction have neural or muscular disorders that alter timing of events or muscular contraction rather than causing oral or pharyngeal structural damage. Some diseases affect a patient’s ability to self‐feed despite normal swallowing. Other diseases affect both the ability to feed and to swallow. For example, patients with Parkinson’s disease often have difficulty sitting and manipulating food as well as having abnormal bolus transfer [14].

      About one‐fourth of cerebrovascular accidents cause dysphagia [14, 15]. In general, left‐sided strokes alter the oral phase of swallowing, whereas right‐sided strokes alter the pharyngeal phase [15, 16]. The corticobulbar pathways in the internal capsule can be damaged by large hemispheric strokes or small‐vessel disease. Acute strokes or small‐vessel disease resulting from hypertension, diabetes, or other causes can also affect the swallowing center in the pons and medulla [17].

      Diseases that directly damage motor neurons in the swallowing center or cranial nerves in the skull base may result in bulbar palsy with oral and pharyngeal swallowing difficulties [18–22]. Lower motor neural destruction occurs in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and 10–15% of patients with acute poliomyelitis [19, 20]. Some patients with a history of poliomyelitis have progressive disintegration of axon terminals in surviving but overworked residual motor neurons, resulting in pharyngeal muscle weakness caused by “post‐polio muscular atrophy” [21]. Meningeal carcinomatosis may also result in dysphagia. Unilateral pharyngeal paresis is often caused by destruction of motor nerves at the skull base or in the neck as a result of tumor, trauma, or surgery [10]. Abnormal transmission at the myoneural junction in myasthenia gravis may result in dysphagia that is initiated or exacerbated by prolonged swallowing.

      Dysphagia resulting from inflammatory or endocrine‐related myopathies is potentially treatable [14]. Dermatomyositis and polymyositis directly damage the intrinsic or extrinsic muscles of the pharynx. Pharyngeal muscle myopathy may be caused by a variety of endocrine disorders, including hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, and Cushing’s syndrome [22].