Gastroenterology
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The goals of this study were to quantify the temporal relationship between swallow-induced glottic closure and (a) signals of swallow initiation, such as hyoid bone movement, tongue base movement, and mylohyoid electrical activity; (b) pharyngeal peristalsis; (c) laryngeal elevation; (d) vestibular closure; and (e) oropharyngeal barium bolus transit. Eight normal subjects (age 20-30 yr) were studied by concurrent transnasal video laryngoscopy, pharyngeal intraluminal manometry, and submental surface electromyography. The manometric, electromyographic, and both video recordings were synchronized with one another using a specially designed event marker. ⋯ Onset of vocal cord adduction also preceded the initiation of peristalsis in the nasopharynx and its propagation to oropharynx and upper esophageal sphincter by 0.64 +/- 0.05 s, 0.82 +/- 0.05 s, and 1.08 +/- 0.04 s, respectively. The time between the onset of vocal cord adduction and their return to full opening was 2.2 +/- 0.09 s. It was concluded that (a) among events evaluated, vocal cord adduction is the initial event during the swallowing sequence; (b) laryngeal kinetics during deglutition have distinctive features, and their close coordination with other swallowing events suggests that they are an essential feature of the swallowing program; and (c) abnormal laryngeal kinetics or lack of coordination between the glottic closure mechanism and oropharyngeal bolus transport may have an important role in swallow-induced aspiration.
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The intraobserver and interobserver variability in measuring the portal vein flow by the echo-Doppler technique was evaluated in a blind controlled study. A total of 22 cirrhotic patients and 14 normal volunteers were examined by two skilled operators using duplex Doppler within a period of 1-3 mo (6 cirrhotics and 7 normal volunteers by both observers). Area, mean velocity, and flow were measured (4 measurements: A, B on day 1; C, D on day 2). ⋯ No acceptable interobserver agreement was found between the two observers in either of the two samples of subjects. These results support the use of this technique mainly for the determination of rapid and large changes in portal hemodynamics within a short period of time. The technique seems to have low precision in monitoring chronic changes in portal hemodynamics.