Differential changes in human pharyngoesophageal motor excitability induced by swallowing, pharyngeal stimulation, and anesthesia

Christopher Fraser, John Rothwell, Maxine Power, Anthony Hobson, David Thompson, Shaheen Hamdy

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    We investigated the effects of water swallowing, pharyngeal stimulation, and oropharyngeal anesthesia on corticobulbar and craniobulbar projections to human swallowing musculature. Changes in pathway excitability were measured via electromyography from swallowed intraluminal pharyngeal and esophageal electrodes to motor cerebral and trigeminal nerve magnetic stimulation. After both water swallowing and pharyngeal stimulation, pharyngoesophageal corticobulbar excitability increased (swallowing: pharynx = 59 ± 12%, P <0.001; esophagus = 45 ± 20%, P <0.05; pharyngeal stimulation: pharynx = 76 ± 19%, P <0.001; esophagus = 45 ± 23%, P = 0.05), being early with swallowing but late with stimulation. By comparison, craniobulbar excitability increased early after swallowing but remained unaffected by pharyngeal stimulation. After anesthesia, both corticobulbar (pharynx = -24 ± 10%, P <0.05; esophagus = -28 ± 7%, P <0.01) and craniobulbar excitability showed a late decrease. Thus swallowing induces transient early facilitation of corticobulbar and craniobulbar projections, whereas electrical stimulation promotes delayed facilitation mainly in cortex. With removal of input, both corticobulbar and craniobulbar projections show delayed inhibition, implying a reduction in motoneuron and/or cortical activity.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)G137-G144
    JournalAJP: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology
    Volume285
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2003

    Keywords

    • Deelutition
    • Motor cortex
    • Plasticity
    • Sensation

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Differential changes in human pharyngoesophageal motor excitability induced by swallowing, pharyngeal stimulation, and anesthesia'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this