Abstract

Airway clearance is a critical component of both maintenance of respiratory health and management of acute respiratory illnesses. The process of effective airway clearance begins with the recognition of secretions in the airway and culminates in expectoration or swallowing. There are multiple points on this continuum at which neuromuscular disease causes impaired airway clearance. This can result in an otherwise mild upper respiratory illness progressing unabated from an easily managed condition to a severe, life-threatening lower respiratory illness requiring intensive therapy for patient recovery. Even during periods of relative health, airway protective mechanisms can be compromised, and patients may have difficulty managing average quantities of secretions. This review summarizes airway clearance physiology and pathophysiology, mechanical and pharmacologic treatment modalities, and provides a practical approach for managing secretions in patients with neuromuscular disease. Neuromuscular disease is an umbrella term used to describe disorders that involve dysfunction of peripheral nerves, the neuromuscular junction, or skeletal muscle. Although this paper specifically reviews airway clearance pertaining to those with neuromuscular diseases (e.g., muscular dystrophy, spinal muscular atrophy, myasthenia gravis), most of its content is relevant to the management of patients with central nervous system disorders such as chronic static encephalopathy caused by trauma, metabolic or genetic abnormalities, congenital infection, or neonatal hypoxic-ischemic injury.

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