Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Prediction of Dysphagia Severity: An Investigation of the Dysphagia Patterns in Patients with Lateral Medullary Infarction
Fumiko OshimaMegumi YokozekiMasashi HamanakaKeisuke ImaiMasahiro MakinoMiyuki KimuraYasushi FujimotoMasako Fujiu-Kurachi
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

2013 Volume 52 Issue 12 Pages 1325-1331

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Abstract

Objective In order to identify the factors that influence the swallowing function in patients who develop Wallenberg syndrome (WS) following lateral medullary infarction (LMI), we examined various patient characteristics, including the passage pattern abnormality (PPA) of a bolus through the upper esophageal sphincter (UES).
Methods Fifty-four pure LMI patients with dysphagia participated in this study. PPA, defined as the failure of bolus passage through the UES corresponding to the intact side of the medulla, was identified during videofluorographic swallowing evaluations of each patient. On brain magnetic resonance imaging, the subjects' lesions were classified vertically into three levels and horizontally into seven levels in relation to the involvement of the ambiguous and/or solitary nuclei. Logistic regression analyses were performed for age, sex, PPA and the vertical and horizontal sites of the lesions.
Results In terms of severity, 15 subjects were categorized as having mild dysphagia, 26 subjects were categorized as having moderate dysphagia and 13 were categorized as having severe dysphagia. Subjects with cephalic lesions, greater vertical spread of the lesion and PPA were more likely to have severe dysphagia. PPA and a greater vertical spread of the lesion were related to the severity of the functional outcome (p<0.01). The horizontal extent of the lesion was not strongly related to the prognosis.
Conclusion The presence of PPA in LMI patients is suggestive of abnormalities in the swallowing pattern and, in turn, damage to the medullary central pattern generator. The presence of PPA and a greater vertical spread of the lesion can be useful predictors of severe dysphagia.

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© 2013 by The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
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