The Impact of Dysphagia Exercise on Oropharyngeal Swallowing Function in Patients With ALS
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Status
- Not yet recruiting
- Sponsor
- Nova Southeastern University
- Enrollment
- 20
- Primary Endpoint
- Maximum Anterior Isometric Lingual Pressure Measured Using the TongueMeter Device
Overview
Brief Summary
This study is testing a tongue exercise program for people living with ALS to see if it can help support speech and swallowing. All participants will receive the treatment, and researchers will measure changes over time by comparing each person's results to their own earlier results.
People who join the study will have two in-person visits, one virtual visit, and four weekly telehealth sessions with a speech-language pathologist. During these sessions, participants will practice tongue resistance exercises, complete speech and swallowing tasks, and answer surveys about their experience. They will also use a small device at home to measure tongue strength and swallowing.
The exercise program involves pressing the tongue against a device several times a day, five days per week, for five weeks. Researchers want to learn if this program is safe, practical, and helpful for people with ALS.
Detailed Description
Study Description
Brief Summary:
This study is designed to evaluate the effects of isometric lingual strengthening exercises on speech and swallowing function in individuals with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). By targeting tongue strength, we aim to improve pressure generation, support safer and more efficient swallowing, enhance speech intelligibility, and examine the relationship between lingual strength and patient-reported outcomes.
Detailed Description:
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) often results in progressive weakness of the tongue and other oral structures, which contributes to impaired speech intelligibility, swallowing safety, and overall quality of life. Lingual strengthening exercises may offer a non-invasive, behavioral intervention to preserve oral function in this population. However, the efficacy and broader impact of such exercises remain underexplored.
The aims of this study are to:
Evaluate the efficacy of isometric lingual strength exercises in improving tongue pressure generation in people with ALS (pALS).
Investigate the impact of lingual strengthening exercises on speech intelligibility, swallowing safety, and swallowing efficiency.
Assess the relationship between lingual strength, speech intelligibility, swallowing function, and patient-reported outcomes related to motor speech, swallowing-related quality of life, and fatigue.
Methods and Study Design:
This study uses a delayed-start, repeated-measures design in which participants serve as their own controls. This approach allows all participants to receive the intervention while also accounting for disease heterogeneity and interparticipant variability.
Participants will complete two baseline assessments (in-person at Week 0, virtual at Week 5), a 5-week intervention phase (Weeks 5-10), and a final in-person evaluation at Week 10. A follow-up strength assessment will occur at the participant's next scheduled multidisciplinary ALS Clinic visit (~6 months).
Study Procedures and Timeline:
Screening / Baseline 1 (Week 0, in-person, 60-90 min):
Informed consent and eligibility screening.
Assessments: Maximum isometric lingual pressure (Tongueometer), 3D tongue ultrasound, Bamboo Passage (speech rate), oral diadochokinesis (temporal variability), 3-ounce water test (swallowing safety), TOMASS (oral efficiency), videofluoroscopic swallow study (VFSS), and patient-reported measures (Eat-10, ALSFRS-R, ETBQ).
Baseline 2 (Week 5, virtual, 60-90 min):
Repeat assessments from Baseline 1, excluding VFSS and ultrasound.
Introduction of isometric lingual strength training; first training session completed during this visit.
Telehealth Training Sessions (Weeks 5-10, weekly, 30-60 min each):
Conducted via Zoom.
Tongue resistance training, Bamboo Passage, diadochokinesis, 3-ounce water test.
Patient-reported measures (ALSFRS-R, ETBQ, Eat-10).
Research clinician monitors fidelity, provides progression adjustments, and records data.
Active Exercise Training Regimen:
Frequency: 5 sessions per week for 5 weeks.
Intensity: 60% of each participant's maximum anterior lingual pressure (MAIP).
Volume: 6 sets of 5 repetitions/day (30 repetitions/day; 150 repetitions/week).
Contraction: 2-second hold for each isometric press.
Progression: Training thresholds updated weekly to maintain 60% MAIP.
Final Evaluation (Week 10, in-person):
Assessments identical to Baseline 2 with inclusion of VFSS, ultrasound, and ETBQ.
Follow-up (6 months, routine ALS clinic visit):
Isometric lingual strength assessment repeated using the Tongueometer.
Exploratory Outcome:
Ultrasound imaging will be completed at baseline and final evaluations to quantify morphologic changes in tongue structure related to exercise.
Study Design
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Allocation
- Na
- Intervention Model
- Single Group
- Primary Purpose
- Treatment
- Masking
- None
Eligibility Criteria
- Ages
- 18 Years to 99 Years (Adult, Older Adult)
- Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
- •Diagnosis of possible, probable, or definite ALS (El-Escorial Revisited)
- •Lingual exercises naïve
- •Impaired lingual strength generation compared to normative data (\<43 kPa; Robinson et al., 2023)
- •EAT-10 score \<3
Exclusion Criteria
- •Head injury
- •Head and neck cancer
- •Tracheostomy
- •Other concomitant neurogenic disorder
- •Recent oral surgery other than routine dental surgery
- •Unable to generate isometric lingual pressure on lingual manometer
- •Participation in another clinical trial intervention that may confound results
- •NPO (nothing by mouth)
- •Anarthric
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Maximum Anterior Isometric Lingual Pressure Measured Using the TongueMeter Device
Time Frame: Participant will start using the tongue meter from day of enrollment. Baseline 1 : MAIP collected , Baseline 2: 5 weeks after baseline , then MAIP calculated at home , intensity of exercise set at 60% MAIP, 5 weeks of exercise at 60% MAIP
Measurement Tool: Lingual pressure is measured using the TongueMeter, a handheld, pressure-sensing device designed to quantify tongue strength during isometric tasks. A calibrated intraoral pressure sensor is positioned against the hard palate. Participants are instructed to press the tongue upward with maximal effort for a standardized duration, and the device records the resulting pressure output. Unit of Measure: Lingual strength is quantified as peak pressure, reported in kilopascals (kPa). Outcome Variable: The primary outcome is the maximum peak lingual pressure (kPa) achieved across trials, with higher values indicating greater lingual strength
Videofluoroscopic Swallow Study
Time Frame: Baseline, Visit 1 (week 1), and Final Visit (week 10)swallowing safety/efficiency via DIGEST and PAS scores
This measure assesses swallowing safety and efficiency in participants using standardized VFSS trials. Safety is quantified using the Penetration-Aspiration Scale (PAS) to capture airway compromise, while swallowing efficiency is measured with the Dynamic Imaging Grade of Swallowing Toxicity (DIGEST), which integrates residue severity and functional impact. Unit of Measure: PAS score for each swallow (ordinal 1-8) DIGEST grade for overall swallowing function (ordinal 0-4) Outcome Variable: The primary outcome is the frequency and severity of airway compromise (PAS) and overall dysphagia severity (DIGEST) during VFSS. Higher PAS and DIGEST scores indicate worse swallowing safety and efficiency.
Secondary Outcomes
- EAT-10(From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks.)
- Test of Mastication and Swallowing Solids(From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks.)
- ALS Functional Rating Scale(From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks.)
- The Eating Tool Burden Questionnaire(To be given during at week 5 (baseline 2) and week 10 (final))
- Temporal Variability of Oral Diadochokinesis(From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks.)