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External Pharyngeal Exerciser for Dysphagia

Not Applicable
Conditions
Dysphagia
Oral Pharyngeal Dysphagia
Pharyngeal Dysphagia
Interventions
Device: pharyngeal exerciser + standard therapy
Registration Number
NCT05267314
Lead Sponsor
University of Southern California
Brief Summary

Pharyngeal muscle weakness and dysphagia is common in individuals post-stroke or with Parkinson's disease and in individuals with head/neck cancer who have undergone surgery and/or radiation therapy. Therapeutic options for these patients are limited. This pilot study is intended to assess the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of the External Pharyngeal Exerciser (EPE) on patients with pharyngeal dysphagia receiving swallow therapy. Feasibility will be assessed by patient acceptance and practice records. Safety will be compared between groups to test whether there is an increased risk of the EPE versus standard therapy.

Detailed Description

Pharyngeal dysphagia is incredibly common in individuals who suffer from neurological disorders such as stroke or Parkinson's disease and in individuals with head/neck cancer who have undergone surgery and/or radiation therapy. The pharyngeal muscles in these patients are weak. Other than standard patient-driven swallow therapy, the therapeutic options for these patients are limited. Response to standard patient-drive therapy is variable and dependent on a variety of factors including the muscles most affected by the underlying disorder and patient motivation. This pilot study is intended to assess the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of the External Pharyngeal Exerciser (EPE) on patients with pharyngeal dysphagia receiving swallow therapy. Feasibility will be assessed by patient acceptance and practice records. Safety will be compared between groups to test whether there is an increased risk of the EPE versus standard therapy.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria
  • Pharyngeal dysphagia diagnosed with validated questionnaire and modified barium swallow. Participants must be at least 18 years of age or older.
  • Pharyngeal dysphagia secondary to central neurological disorder such as Parkinson's disease or stroke
  • Pharyngeal dysphagia head/neck cancer secondary to surgery/radiation
  • Pharyngeal dysphagia secondary to elderly age > 65
Exclusion Criteria
  • Carotid artery bruit or carotid vascular disorders
  • Muscle diseases like muscular dystrophies, myopathies
  • Neuro-muscular junction disorders myasthenia gravis, Eaton-Lambert disorders
  • Current esophageal symptoms like heartburn, dysphagia, chest pain or regurgitation
  • Autonomic dysfunction
  • Pregnancy or lactation
  • Advanced uncontrolled medical disorders (COPD, congestive heart failure, cirrhosis, cancer, chronic renal failure, etc)
  • Medically unstable

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
exerciser and standard therapypharyngeal exerciser + standard therapyexerciser and standard therapy
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Determine efficacy: effect of EPE on swallowing via effects on pyriform sinus and vallecular residue height and width1 year

To objectively define pharyngeal response to External Pharyngeal Exerciser with Modified Barium swallow before and after therapy: To determine if application of pharyngeal exerciser changes swallowing as evidenced by reduction in height and width of pyriform sinus and vallecular residue using fluoroscopy study.

Determine efficacy: effect of EPE on swallowing via effects on routinely measured markers of deglutition (penetration-aspiration scale, larynx and hyoid anterior/superior excursion; UES diameter, and pharyngeal transit time)1 year

To objectively define pharyngeal response to External Pharyngeal Exerciser with Modified Barium swallow before and after therapy: To determine if application of pharyngeal exerciser changes deglutition as noticed by 1) change in aspiration and penetration measured by Rosenbek's penetration-aspiration scale; 2) change in anterior and superior excursion of larynx and hyoid; 3) change in AP and Lateral diameter of UES; 4) change in pharyngeal transit time.

Determine efficacy as assessed by validated pharyngeal dysphagia questionnaire EAT-101 year

Subjective evaluation of participant response to an External Pharyngeal Exerciser with a validated pharyngeal dysphagia questionnaire (EAT-10) administered as standard of care before and after therapy (scores 1-10, with higher scores mean worse outcome).

Determine the number of adverse events associated with EPE1 year

The aim is to determine whether there are any risks associated with the use of the EPE. There are no known risks to placing external pressure to the larynx. However, there is the possibility that the participant may experience discomfort such as rash or may not be able to tolerate the minimal pressure associated with the exerciser. The participant will be evaluated every two weeks by the study physician and reports of adverse events will be recorded. If the participant experiences difficulty in tolerating the minimal pressure, the study will be stopped.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Physiologic change in swallow performance identified on routine Modified barium swallow1 year

Physiologic changes in swallow performance: oral-motor strength, vocal cord adduction with various food consistencies, presence of penetration/aspiration, length of anterior and superior excursion of larynx, pharyngeal transit time, presence and width of vallecular/piriform residue. Poor anterior or superior excursion of larynx, diminished AP and lateral diameter of UES, presence of residue, penetration/aspiration suggests pharyngeal dysphagia. These measurements will be combined/aggregated to arrive at one reported value.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Anisa Shaker

🇺🇸

Los Angeles, California, United States

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