Abstract

Purpose: We aimed to quantify oropharyngeal swallowing physiology in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and examine relationships between swallowing impairments and ratings of pulmonary function (forced vital capacity percent predicted, FVC % pre) and functional status (ALS Functional Rating Scale–Revised, ALSFRS-R). Method: A retrospective analysis of swallowing-related data of persons with ALS (PALS) was completed. Their Modified Barium Swallow Impairment Profile component, Oral Total (OT), and Pharyngeal Total (PT) scores were compared with data from age- (±1 year) and sex-matched healthy controls retrieved from an archival normative data set using Mann–Whitney U tests. Relationships between PALS' OT and PT scores, FVC % pre, and ALSFRS-R were examined using Pearson product–moment correlations and multiple linear regression modeling. Results: Twenty-one PALS (12 women), with a mean age of 62.2 ± 9.9 years, were included in the analyses. Compared to healthy controls, PALS exhibited significantly worse function across 13 (76%) physiological swallowing components (all p < .05). OT and PT scores significantly differed between PALS and healthy controls (each p < .001), with higher scores (worse impairment) observed in the former. When adjusting for age and sex, FVC % pre was a significant predictor of OT score ( p = .045). An inverse relationship was found with ALSFRS-R and OT score ( p = .052). FVC % pre ( p = .061) and ALSFRS-R ( p = .54) did not significantly predict PT score. Conclusions: PALS demonstrated swallowing impairments across oropharyngeal domains and the esophageal component. In our PALS cohort, FVC % pre was a useful clinical indicator of oral swallowing impairment.

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