PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Effects of pharyngeal electrical stimulation on swallowing performance.

  • Ryosuke Takeishi,
  • Jin Magara,
  • Masahiro Watanabe,
  • Takanori Tsujimura,
  • Hirokazu Hayashi,
  • Kazuhiro Hori,
  • Makoto Inoue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190608
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. e0190608

Abstract

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Pharyngeal electrical stimulation (PEStim) has been found to facilitate voluntary swallowing. This study investigated how PEStim contributed to modulation of swallowing function in 15 healthy humans. In the involuntary swallowing test, water was injected onto the pharynx at 0.05 ml/s and the onset latency of the first swallow was measured. In the voluntary swallowing test, subjects swallowed their own saliva as quickly as possible for 30 s and the number of swallows was counted. Voluntary and involuntary swallowing was evaluated before (baseline), immediately after, and every 10 min after 10-min PEStim for 60 min. A voluntary swallowing test with simultaneous 30-s PEStim was also conducted before and 60 min after 10-min PEStim. The number of voluntary swallows with simultaneous PEStim significantly increased over 60 min after 10-min PEStim compared with the baseline. The onset latency of the first swallow in the involuntary swallowing test was not affected by 10-min PEStim. The results suggest that PEStim may have a long-term facilitatory effect on the initiation of voluntary swallowing in healthy humans, but not on peripherally-evoked swallowing. The physiological implications of this modulation are discussed.