Physiological analyses of swallowing changes due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in anesthetized male rats
Kouta Nagoya, Takanori Tsujimura, Midori Yoshihara, Masahiro Watanabe, Jin Magara, Katsushige Kawasaki, Makoto Inoue

TL;DR
This study explores how COPD in rats affects swallowing reflexes and muscle activity, suggesting a link to increased dysphagia risk.
Contribution
The study provides new physiological insights into how COPD alters swallowing reflexes and muscle activity in rats.
Findings
COPD model rats showed a higher duty cycle during respiration compared to controls.
Swallowing reflex frequency increased during inspiration in COPD rats.
COPD altered Dig and TH muscle activity without causing muscle pathology.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) was previously known as chronic bronchitis and emphysema. It has various main symptoms, such as dyspnea, chronic cough, and sputum, and is often accompanied by dysphagia. Although many published clinical reports have described COPD-related dysphagia, the physiological mechanisms underlying swallowing changes due to COPD remain unclear. Therefore, we analyzed how COPD affects the swallowing reflex using COPD model rats. We performed an electrophysiological study of respiration and swallowing using COPD model induced by intratracheal administration of porcine pancreatic elastase and lipopolysaccharide in Sprague-Dawley male rats. To identify the respiration and swallowing responses, electromyographic activity was recorded from the diaphragm, digastric (Dig), and thyrohyoid (TH) muscles. We confirmed COPD using micro-computed tomography analysis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDysphagia Assessment and Management · Voice and Speech Disorders · Tracheal and airway disorders
