Location of the upper oesophageal sphincter during swallowing: Analysis using swallowing CT

Author:

Gao Minxing12ORCID,Inamoto Yoko34ORCID,Saitoh Eiichi4ORCID,Aihara Keiko3ORCID,Shibata Seiko4ORCID,Gonzalez‐Fernandez Marlis5ORCID,Otaka Yohei4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Health Sciences Fujita Health University Toyoake Aichi Japan

2. Department of Rehabilitation Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University Shenyang Liaoning China

3. Faculty of Rehabilitation, School of Health Sciences Fujita Health University Toyoake Aichi Japan

4. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine I, School of Medicine Fujita Health University Toyoake Aichi Japan

5. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundUpper oesophageal sphincter (UES) serves as an important anatomical and functional landmark during swallowing. However, the precise UES location before and during swallowing has not been well established.ObjectiveThis study aimed to determine upper oesophageal sphincter (UES) location and displacement during swallowing accounting for sex, age, and height in healthy adults using 320‐row area detector computed tomography (320‐ADCT).MethodsNinety‐four healthy adults (43 males; 22–90 years) underwent 320‐ADCT scanning while swallowing one trial of 10 mL honey thick barium. UES location at bolus hold and at maximum displacement and vertical displacement during swallowing were identified using the coordinates and the section classification of vertebrae (VERT scale). The differences and correlations of UES location and distance in terms of sex, age, and height were analysed using Mann–Whitney U test and Spearman's correlation coefficient.ResultsUES locations at bolus hold and at maximum displacement were significantly lower and UES vertical displacement was significantly larger in males than in females (p < .001). UES location at bolus hold became lower with increasing age (r = −.312, p = .002), but the negative correlation was low at maximum displacement (r = −.230, p = .026), resulting in larger vertical distance with ageing. UES locations showed high negative correlation at bolus hold with height (r = −.715, p < .001), and showed moderate negative correlation at maximum displacement with height (r = −.555, p < .001), although this effect was unclear when analysed by sex.ConclusionMales showed lower UES location and larger displacement than females. The impact of age was evident with lower location before swallowing and larger displacement during swallowing. Differences observed by sex were not completely explained by using the VERT scale to adjust for height.

Publisher

Wiley

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