Relationship of vocal fold atrophy to swallowing safety and cough function in Parkinson's disease

TitleRelationship of vocal fold atrophy to swallowing safety and cough function in Parkinson's disease
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsYiu Y, Curtis JA, Perry SE, Troche MS
JournalThe Laryngoscope
Volume130
Start Page2
Abstract

Objectives

When swallowing function is compromised in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), cough plays a crucial role in clearing the airway and preventing pulmonary complications. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of vocal fold atrophy severity as measured by the bowing index (BI) on airway protection in PD.

Methods

Thirty participants with PD completed measures of voluntary and reflex cough. Flexible laryngoscopy with endoscopic evaluation of swallowing allowed for measurement of BI using ImageJ software. Swallowing safety was scored on the Penetration-Aspiration Scale (PAS). Regression and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses were performed to test our study aim.

Results

Twenty-four of 30 participants had some degree of vocal fold atrophy (BI >0). When controlling for age, disease duration did not significantly influence BI. BI was not predictive of any sensorimotor parameters of cough including measures of cough airflow, reflex cough threshold, or urge to cough. BI discriminated participants with near-normal (PAS 1–3) swallowing safety from participants with impaired (PAS 4–8) swallowing safety (P = .01, sensitivity: 87.0%, specificity: 71.4%, cutoff value BI >4.6).

Conclusion

Vocal fold atrophy is a potential factor contributing to poor swallowing safety in PD. BI was not associated with cough function in this PD cohort, contrary to prior studies that have shown improved cough measures after vocal fold augmentation. Vocal fold atrophy in PD remains an important area of study as a targetable intervention for patients with airway protective dysfunction. Future studies should include measures of glottic closure during vocal fold adduction.

URLhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/lary.28158
DOI10.1002/lary.28158