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Hard to Swallow

New England Journal of Medicine, 2021
Hard to Swallow A previously healthy 20-year-old college student presented before the Covid-19 pandemic with a 3-day history of throat pain, malaise, cough, and chills.
Mary W Montgomery   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Anatomy of a swallow [PDF]

open access: possibleBMJ, 2015
Name the imaging modality used and the condition shown in fig 1⇓. The imaging modality used is a barium swallow investigation and it shows a pharyngeal pouch. An incidental note was made of fusion of the C5-C7 vertebrae. ### Discussion The clinical presentation of a pharyngeal pouch …
Ball SL, Arullendran P
openaire   +3 more sources

Swallowing

2020
The physical act of swallowing is a normal part of life for healthy individuals. Although intricate and complex in its orchestration, to most it is an effortless action. Multiple muscles contract and relax in patterns regulated and modulated by swallowing centers in the brainstem and cortex.
Sasegbon, Ayodele   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Volume of a Swallow

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1961
The fact that one of us was unable to find a medical reference to the volume of a liquid consumed by a patient in the act of swallowing, led us to attempt to obtain this information experimentally. These pilot-study findings are presented in the belief that such information may be of interest to those physicians who have occasion to treat cases of ...
Charles E. Work, Daniel V. Jones
openaire   +2 more sources

Neurophysiology of swallowing

Clinical Neurophysiology, 2003
Swallowing is a complex motor event that is difficult to investigate in man by neurophysiological experiments. For this reason, the characteristics of the brain stem pathways have been studied in experimental animals. However, the sequential and orderly activation of the swallowing muscles with the monitoring of the laryngeal excursion can be recorded ...
Ibrahim Aydogdu, Cumhur Ertekin
openaire   +3 more sources

Effect of effortful swallowing training on tongue strength and oropharyngeal swallowing function in stroke patients with dysphagia: a double-blind, randomized controlled trial.

International journal of language and communication disorders, 2019
BACKGROUND Effortful swallowing training (EST) is a remedial method for the training of swallowing-related muscles in the oropharyngeal phase. However, clinical evidence of its effectiveness is insufficient.
Hee-Su Park   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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