maggie praxis 2 Flashcards

1
Q

CNs involved in swallowing

A

Trigeminal (V), Facial (VII), Glossopharyngeal (IX), Vagus (X), Hypoglossal (XII)

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2
Q

Describe oral preparatory phase of swallow (adults)

A

Food/liquid is manipulated in the oral cavity, chewed (if necessary), and made into a bolus, which is sealed with the tongue against the hard palate

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3
Q

Describe oral phase of swallow

A

Tongue moves food or liquid toward the back of the mouth (toward the anterior faucial pillars). To achieve this, the tongue presses the bolus against the hard palate and squeezes the bolus posteriorly

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4
Q

Describe pharyngeal phase of swallow

A

:Swallow reflex triggered and bolus is carried through the pharynx. These simultaneous actions occur: (a) the velopharyngeal port closes; (b) the bolus is squeezed to the top of the esophagus (cricopharyngeal sphincter); (c) the larynx elevates as the epiglottis, false vocal folds, and true vocal folds close to seal the airway; and (d) the cricopharyngeal sphincter relaxes to allow the bolus to enter the esophagus

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5
Q

Esophageal phase

A

Bolus is transported through the esophagus into the stomach

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6
Q

Neurological causes associated w/ dysphagia

A

CVA, TBI, muscular dystrophy, Parkinson’s, myasthenia gravis, ALS, MS, CP

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7
Q

Non-neurologic causes associated w/ dysphagia

A

Head and neck cancer, GERD, esophageal tumors

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8
Q

Diagnostic tests for dysphagia

A

Videofluoroscopy, fiber-optic endoscopy, scintigraphy

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9
Q

Videofluoroscopy

A

e.g. modified barium swallow): a moving radiograph of the mouth, pharynx, larynx, and cervical esophagus during swallowing. can identify the specific nature of the oropharyngeal dysphagia; it can define abnormality of movements, trace progress of bolus, and demonstrate aspiration

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10
Q

Fiber-optic endoscopy

A

useful in assessing swallowing by providing direct observation of pharyngeal activity during the swallowing process

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11
Q

Scintigraphy

A

produces an image of the swallowing mechanism by first covering the vocal tract with a specific nuclide and recording the distribution of the radioactivity w/ a scanning external scintillation camera

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12
Q

Laryngeal penetration

A

occurs when swallowed material penetrates laryngeal side of epiglottis, aryepiglottic folds, or spills over arytrenoid cartilages above level of true VFs

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13
Q

Aspiration

A

swallowed material has entered the trachea below the level of the true vocal folds

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14
Q

Tx for dysphagia

A

Lip exercises, tongue exercises, jaw exercises, swallowing exercises

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15
Q

Postural tx methods for dysphagia

A

Chin tuck, head turn, head tilt, head back, chin tuck w/ head turn

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16
Q

Chin tuck

A

pushes base of tongue towards pharyngeal wall; expands vallecular recesses; narrows entrance to laryngeal vestibule by moving epiglottis posteriorly. Used for delayed onset pharyngeal swallow; reduced base of tongue retraction to posterior pharyngeal wall approximation; decreased airway protection; aspiration DURING swallow

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17
Q

Head turn (to weak side)

A

blocks bolus from traveling down weak side by twisting the pharynx; applies pressure to the vocal fold to increase approximation; reduces resting pressure or the cricopharyngeus by pulling the larynx away from the posterior pharyngeal wall (increasing the space)used for unilateral pharyngeal weakness; unilateral laryngeal weakness; cricopharyngeal dysfunction

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18
Q

Head tilt (to stronger side)

A

directs bolus to stronger side of oral/pharyngeal cavities used for unilateral oral weakness; unilateral pharyngeal weakness

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19
Q

Head back posture

A

used for oral transit dysfunction. gravity helps clear the oral cavity

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20
Q

Chin tuck w/ head turn

A

increases epiglottic deflection to narrow the entrance to the laryngeal vestibule; increases VF approximation by applying extrinsic pressure used for reduced airway closure

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21
Q

Swallow maneuvers (not appropriate for those w/ cognitive deficits)

A

Supraglottic swallow, super-supraglotic swallow, Mendelsohn Maneuver, effortful swallow

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22
Q

Supraglottic swallow

A

Patient holds breath and coughs immediatly following a swallow to close VFs before and during swallow. Used when there is reduced airway protection (at the vocal fold level); Aspiration DURING the swallow

23
Q

Super-supraglottic swallow

A

Patient holds breath, bears down, and coughs immediately following swallow and immediately swallows hard again. Used when there is reduced airway closure; aspiration BEFORE and DURING the swallow

24
Q

Mendelsohn Maneuver

A

Increased laryngeal movement stretches/opens the CP; Prolonging hyolaryngeal elevation keeps the CP open longer. used for 1) Decreased range/duration hyolaryngeal elevation; (2) Decreased range/duration cricopharyngeal opening; (3) Decreased pharyngeal swallow coordination

25
Q

Effortful swallow

A

Used to clear residue in valleculae. The increased effort increases the posterior movement of the base of tongue

26
Q

Shaker Exercise & Mendelsohn exercise

A

Rehab swallowing exercises to improve function of strap muscles

27
Q

Gastrostomy

A

creating an opening of a stoma in the stomach wall when normal food ingestion is not possible or ill-advised

28
Q

Odynophagia

A

pain during swallow

29
Q

Surgical/medical tx to protect airway

A

Stents, laryngotracheal separation, laryngectomy, trach tubes, feeding tubes

30
Q

Surgical treatments to improve glottal closure

A

Medialization thyroplasty and injection of biomaterials

31
Q

Medialization thryoplasty

A

surgical procedure which moves the paralyzed vocal fold closer to the mid glottis to allow better compensation by the unaffected fold

32
Q

Surgical/medical tx to improve opening of pharyngoesophageal segment

A

Dilatation, Myotomy, Botox Injection

33
Q

Bedside swallow exam

A

Obtain case history. Observe function of jaw, lips, tongue, phayrnx, larynx, and eating various textures

34
Q

Blom-Singer

A

indwelling low-pressure voice prosthesis kit (laryngectomy)

35
Q

ProVox

A

low-resistance indwelling prosthetic (laryngectomy)

36
Q

Servox

A

transcervical electrolarynx

37
Q

Cooper-Rand

A

intraoral electrolarynx

38
Q

HME device

A

Heat and moisture exchanger. Filter placed on tracheostoma which heats and humidifies air. laryngectomy)

39
Q

7 Extrinsic muscles of larynx

A

Digastric,Stylohyoid, Mylohyoid, Geniohyoid,Hypoglossus, Genioglossus, Thropharyngeus

40
Q

7 Intrinsic muscle of larynx

A

Cricothyroid, Lateral cricoarytenoid(lateral), Posterior cricoarytenoid, Arytenoid, Thyroarytenoid,Aryepiglottis, Thyroepiglottis

41
Q

Muscle with greatest control of fundamental frequency

A

Cricothyroid

42
Q

Muscles of abduction

A

Posterior cricoarytenoid

43
Q

Muscles of adduction

A

Lateral cricoarytenoid, transverse arytenoid

44
Q

Spastic dysphonia

A

overadduction of VFs = strained, choked, or creaky voice

45
Q

Functional dysphonia

A

Likely results in no voice due to underadducted VFs.

46
Q

Vocal cord paralysis-vocal characteristics

A

hoarse, breathy, decreased vocal intensity, loss of pitch range

47
Q

Ventricular dysphonia

A

Patient adducts & vibrates ventricular bands instead or in addition to the vocal cords

48
Q

Laryngeal web

A

Web grows btw VFs, usually triggered by mucosal surface laryngeal injury or irritation. Can cause severe dysphonia and shortness of breath but NOT total absence of voice

49
Q

Acute laryngitis

A

person may lose the use of voice and may become aphonic during episode. **not approriate to provide voice tx to these individuals

50
Q

Vocal nodules characteristics

A

hoarse voice quality, hard glottal attacks, and lowering of pitch

51
Q

Ventricular phonation

A

Person uses false VFs- A rough type of phonation that, when used in conjunction with the true VFs, can result in diplophonia

52
Q

Spastic dysphonia

A

involves aphonic breaks due to sudden over adduction or under adduction of VFs

53
Q

Contact ulcers

A

stress, use voice extensively in daily life, has a tense, hard-driving personality, and exhibits glottal fry

54
Q

Glottal fry

A

when VFs vibrate very slowly and the vibration causes a slow, low pitch vocal burst making the voice sound crackly or creaky, airflow rate and air pressure that produces the VF vibration are both low and lung volume is less