Clinical determinants and neural correlates of presbyphagia in community-dwelling older adults.

Labeit B; Muhle P; von Itter J; Slavik J; Wollbrink A; Sporns P; Rusche T; Ruck T; Hüsing-Kabar A; Gellner R; Gross J; Wirth R; Claus I; Warnecke T; Dziewas R; Suntrup-Krueger S

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

BACKGROUND - MATERIALS AND METHODS - RESULTS - CONCLUSIONS; "Presbyphagia" refers to characteristic age-related changes in the complex neuromuscular swallowing mechanism. It has been hypothesized that cumulative impairments in multiple domains affect functional reserve of swallowing with age, but the multifactorial etiology and postulated compensatory strategies of the brain are incompletely understood. This study investigates presbyphagia and its neural correlates, focusing on the clinical determinants associated with adaptive neuroplasticity.; 64 subjects over 70 years of age free of typical diseases explaining dysphagia received comprehensive workup including flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing (FEES), magnetoencephalography (MEG) during swallowing and pharyngeal stimulation, volumetry of swallowing muscles, laboratory analyzes, and assessment of hand-grip-strength, nutritional status, frailty, olfaction, cognition and mental health. Neural MEG activation was compared between participants with and without presbyphagia in FEES, and associated clinical influencing factors were analyzed. Presbyphagia was defined as the presence of oropharyngeal swallowing alterations e.g., penetration, aspiration, pharyngeal residue pooling or premature bolus spillage into the piriform sinus and/or laryngeal vestibule.; 32 of 64 participants showed swallowing alterations, mainly characterized by pharyngeal residue, whereas the airway was rarely compromised. In the MEG analysis, participants with presbyphagia activated an increased cortical sensorimotor network during swallowing. As major clinical determinant, participants with swallowing alterations exhibited reduced pharyngeal sensation. Presbyphagia was an independent predictor of a reduced nutritional status in a linear regression model.; Swallowing alterations frequently occur in otherwise healthy older adults and are associated with decreased nutritional status. Increased sensorimotor cortical activation may constitute a compensation attempt to uphold swallowing function due to sensory decline. Further studies are needed to clarify whether the swallowing alterations observed can be considered physiological per se or whether the concept of presbyphagia may need to be extended to a theory with a continuous transition between presbyphagia and dysphagia.

Details about the publication

JournalFrontiers in Aging Neuroscience (Front Aging Neurosci)
Volume14
Page range912691-912691
StatusPublished
Release year2022 (30/12/2022)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.3389/fnagi.2022.912691
Keywordspresbyphagia, magnetoencephalography,

Authors from the University of Münster

Claus, Inga
Department for Neurology
Groß, Joachim
Institute for Biomagnetism and Biosignalanalysis
Labeit, Bendix Ruven
Department for Neurology
Muhle, Paul
Department for Neurology
Rusche, Thilo
Clinic of Radiology
Suntrup-Krüger, Sonja
Department for Neurology
Wollbrink, Andreas
Institute for Biomagnetism and Biosignalanalysis