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Less is known how dysphagia affects older patients without neurologic diseases and whether the symptoms of dysphagia have any association with impaired central control of swallowing. This study investigated the state of the corticobulbar tract, the surrogate marker for the central control of swallowing, in older dysphagic patients without any neurologic diseases, using diffusion tensor tractography. This retrospective observational study was conducted at a tertiary university hospital including 10 patients 60 yrs or older with oropharyngeal dysphagia without neurological disease and 11 age- and sex-matched control participants. The corticobulbar tract was reconstructed, and the fractional anisotropy and tract volume were measured using diffusion tensor tractography. The corticobulbar tracts of the dysphagia group were narrowed and not reconstructed by their configurations and had lower fractional anisotropy and tract volume values when compared with those of control group. Significant asymmetry between the left and the right corticobulbar tract hemispheres was found in the dysphagia group, whereas no asymmetry was found in the control group. A deteriorated corticobulbar tract could be associated with the development of dysphagia in older adults without neurological diseases. Our findings might help establish more appropriate treatment strategies, such as targeted neuromodulation therapies in the future. Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

Min Cheol Chang, Yousung Seo, Soyoung Kwak. Deterioration of the Corticobulbar Tract in Older Dysphagic Patients Without Neurologic Diseases. American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation. 2022 Apr 01;101(4):353-357

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PMID: 35302528

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