Characterization of swallowing sound: Preliminary investigation of normal subjects

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Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to characterize the swallowing sound and identify the process of sound generation during swallowing in young healthy adults. Methods: Thirty-three healthy volunteers were enrolled and allocated into three experimental groups. In experiment 1, a microphone was attached to one of eight cervical sites in 20 subjects, participants swallowed 5 ml water, and the sound waveform was recorded. In experiment 2,10 subjects swallowed either 0, 5,10, or 15 ml water during audio recording. In addition, participants consumed the 5 ml bolus in two different cervical postures. In experiment 3, the sound waveform and videofluoroscopy were simultaneously recorded while the three participants consumed 5 ml iopamidol solution. The duration and peak intensity ratio of the waveform were analyzed in all experimental groups. Results: The acoustic analysis of the waveforms and videofluoroscopy suggested that the swallowing sound could be divided into three periods, each associated with a stage of the swallowing movement: the oral phase comprising posterior tongue and hyoid bone movement; the pharyngeal phase comprising larynx movement, hyoid bone elevation, epiglottis closure, and passage of the bolus through the esophagus orifice; and the repositioning phase comprising the return of the hyoid bone and larynx to their resting positions, and reopening of the epiglottis. Conclusion: Acoustic analysis of swallowing sounds and videofluoroscopy suggests that the swallowing sound could be divided into three periods associated with each process of the swallowing movement: the oral phase comprising the posterior movement of the tongue and hyoid bone; the pharyngeal phase comprising the laryngeal movement, hyoid bone elevation, epiglottis closure, and the bolus passage to the esophagus orifice; and the repositioning phase comprising the repositioning of the hyoid bone and larynx, and reopening of the epiglottis.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Swallowing sound recording system and eight cervical sites for microphone attached. (HB: center of the hyoid bone; LP: center of the laryngeal prominence; CC: center of the cricoid cartilage; BCC: center of the ventral cricoid cartilage; SN: suprasternal notch; STup: intersection of the lateral HB and the front edge of the sternocleidomastoid muscle; STmid: intersection of the lateral LP and the front edge of the sternocleidomastoid muscle; STlow: intersection of the lateral CC and the front edge of the sternocleidomastoid muscle).
  • Fig 2. Representative swallowing sound waveform divided into three sections (recording site: LP).
  • Fig 3. Duration (mean and standard deviation) of the first, second, and third swallowing sound waves at the eight cervical sites (*p<0.0018).
  • Fig 4. Peak intensity ratio (mean and standard deviation) of the first, second, and third swallowing sound waves at the eight cervical sites (*p<0.0018).
  • Table 1. The mean of intra and inter-subject standard deviations of the first, second, and third swallowing sound waves.
  • Fig 5. Duration and peak intensity ratio of the first, second, and third swallowing sound waves according to bolus volume (*p<0.05, **p<0.01).
  • Fig 6. Duration and peak intensity ratio of the first, second, and third swallowing sound waves in normal and chin-down positions(*p<0.05).
  • Fig 7. Representative profiles of recording simultaneously of swallowing sounds and videofluoroscopy (recording site: LP).

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Honda, T., Baba, T., Fujimoto, K., Goto, T., Nagao, K., Harada, M., … Ichikawa, T. (2016). Characterization of swallowing sound: Preliminary investigation of normal subjects. PLoS ONE, 11(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168187

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