Parkinson's disease is associated with low striated esophagus contractility potentially contributing to the development of dysphagia

Author:

Kerschner Alexander1,Hassan Hamza2,Kern Mark2,Edeani Francis2,Mei Ling2,Sanvanson Patrick2,Shaker Reza2ORCID,Yu Elliot2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine The Hub for Collaborative Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

2. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology The Hub for Collaborative Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundParkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, and more than 80% of PD patients will develop oropharyngeal dysphagia. Despite its striated histology, proximity to airway, and potential negative impact of its dysfunction on bolus transport and airway safety, the contractile function of the striated esophagus in PD patients has not been systematically studied.MethodsUsing our repository of clinical manometry and the Milwaukee ManoBank, we analyzed high‐resolution manometry (HRM) studies of 20 PD patients, mean age 69.1 (range 38–87 years); 30 non‐PD patients with dysphagia, mean age 64.0 (44–86 years); and 32 healthy volunteers, mean age 65.3 (39–86 years). Patients with abnormal findings based on Chicago Classification 4.0 were identified. Repeat analysis was performed in 20% of the manometric tracings by a different investigator with inter‐rater concordance between 0.91 and 0.99.Key ResultsThe striated esophageal contractile integral in PD patients was significantly lower than that in non‐PD dysphagic patients and healthy controls (p = 0.03 and <0.01, respectively). This significant difference persisted after excluding patients with concurrent Chicago Classification motility disorders (p = 0.02 and 0.01, respectively). In both analyses, the distal esophageal contractile integral did not show any significant difference between groups (p = 0.58 and 0.93, respectively).Conclusions & InferencesPD is associated with a significant decrease in striated esophagus contractility compared to non‐PD and healthy controls. This finding may play a pathophysiologic role in development of dysphagia in this patient population.

Publisher

Wiley

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