Dysphagia Slide
Dysphagia Slide
Dysphagia Slide
➤ Physiology of
swallowing
➤ Associated
Symptoms
➤ Classification
➤ Risk
factors &
complicaton
➤ Diagnosis
&
Management
Definition
➤ Difficulty swallowing (dysphagia) means it takes more time
and effort to move food or liquid from the mouth to the
stomach. Dysphagia may also be associated with pain. In some
cases, swallowing may be impossible.
NOTE**
-Solid bolus need peristaltic waves to move.
-Residual liquid bolus usually moved by gravity alone if
the person is standing .
Associated Symptoms
Signs and symptoms may include:
1. Oropharyngeal
Dysphagia
2. Esophageal Dysphagia
Oropharyngeal dysphagia
➤ The inability to propel a food bolus successfully from the
hypopharyngeal area through the upper esophageal sphincter into
the esophageal body is called oropharyngeal or transfer dysphagia.
➤
Oropharyngeal disorders affect the initiation of swallowing at the
pharynx and upper esophageal sphincter.
➤ The patient has difficulty initiating swallowing and complains of
choking, nasal regurgitation or tracheal aspiration.
➤ With processes that affect the mouth, hypopharynx, and upper
esophagus, the patient is often unable to initiate a swallow and
repeatedly has to attempt to swallow.
Myasthenia gravis
Parkinson’s disease
Polymyositis or dermatomyositis
Stroke
2. Structural Causes:
Carcinoma
Thyromegaly
Zenker’s diverticulum
Esophageal dysphagia
➤ Esophageal dysphagia refers to the sensation of food
sticking or getting hung up in the base of your throat
or in your chest after you've started to swallow.
➤ Esophageal disorders cause dysphagia by
obstructing the lumen or by affecting motility.
➤ Patients complain of food ‘sticking’ after swallowing,
although the level at which it is felt correlates poorly
with the true site of obstruction. Swallowing of liquids
is normal until strictures become extreme.
Causes of esophageal dysphagia
1. Motility (Neuromuscular) Disorders:
Primary:
1.Achalasia
Secondary:
3.Chagas’ disease
4.Reflux-related dysmotility
5.Scleroderma and other rheumatologic disorder
2. Structural (Mechanical) Disorders:
Intrinsic
1.Carcinoma and benign tumors
2.Diverticula
3.Eosinophilic esophagitis
4.Esophageal rings and webs
5.Foreign body
Extrinsic
7. Mediastinal mass
8. Spinal osteophytes
9. Vascular compression
Risk factors &
complications
Risk factors for dysphagia:
1. Aging. Due to natural aging and normal wear and tear on the esophagus and a
greater risk of certain conditions, such as stroke or Parkinson's disease, older
adults are at higher risk of swallowing difficulties. But, dysphagia isn't
considered a normal sign of aging.
Complications:
Difficulty swallowing can lead to:
2. Aspiration pneumonia. Food or liquid entering your airway when you try to
swallow can cause aspiration pneumonia, because the food can introduce bacteria to
the lungs.
3. Choking. When food gets stuck in the throat, choking can occur. If food completely
blocks the airway, and no one intervenes with a successful Heimlich maneuver,
death can occur.
Diagnosis &
Management
Diagnosis
1. X-ray with a contrast material (barium X-ray).
Show changes in the shape of the esophagus and can assess the muscular
activity.
3. Endoscopy
4. Esophageal muscle test (monometry)
a small tube is inserted into the esophagus and connected to a pressure
recorder to measure the muscle contractions of the esophagus as they
swallow.
5. Imaging scans
Lower esophageal (schatzki)
ring
Achlasia
Esophageal web
Management
--For oropharyngeal dysphagia, the doctor may refer the patient to a
speech or swallowing therapist, and therapy may include: