This Article Appeared in a Journal Published by Elsevier. the Attached

This Article Appeared in a Journal Published by Elsevier. the Attached

This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The attached copy is furnished to the author for internal non-commercial research and education use, including for instruction at the authors institution and sharing with colleagues. Other uses, including reproduction and distribution, or selling or licensing copies, or posting to personal, institutional or third party websites are prohibited. In most cases authors are permitted to post their version of the article (e.g. in Word or Tex form) to their personal website or institutional repository. Authors requiring further information regarding Elsevier’s archiving and manuscript policies are encouraged to visit: http://www.elsevier.com/copyright Author's personal copy ARTICLE IN PRESS ZOOLOGY Zoology 111 (2008) 339–349 www.elsevier.de/zool Development of the movement of the epiglottis in infant and juvenile pigs Alfred W. Cromptona, Rebecca Z. Germana,b,Ã, Allan J. Thextona,c aMuseum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 01238, USA bDepartment of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University, 98 N. Broadway, Suite 409, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA cKing’s College London, London SE1 7EH, UK Received 29 June 2007; received in revised form 19 October 2007; accepted 21 October 2007 Abstract Although backward folding of the epiglottis is one of the signal events of the mammalian adult swallow, the epiglottis does not fold during the infant swallow. How this functional change occurs is unknown, but we hypothesize that a change in swallow mechanism occurs with maturation, prior to weaning. Using videofluoroscopy, we found three characteristic patterns of swallowing movement at different ages in the pig: an infant swallow, a transitional swallow and a post-weaning (juvenile or adult) swallow. In animals of all ages, the dorsal region of the epiglottis and larynx was held in an intranarial position by a muscular sphincter formed by the palatopharyngeal arch. In the infant swallow, increasing pressure in the oropharynx forced a liquid bolus through the piriform recesses on either side of a relatively stationary epiglottis into the esophagus. As the infant matured, the palatopharyngeal arch and the soft palate elevated at the beginning of the swallow, so exposing a larger area of the epiglottis to bolus pressure. In transitional swallows, the epiglottis was tilted backward relatively slowly by a combination of bolus pressure and squeezing of the epiglottis by closure of the palatopharyngeal sphincter. The bolus, however, traveled alongside but never over the tip of the epiglottis. In the juvenile swallow, the bolus always passed over the tip of the epiglottis. The tilting of the epiglottis resulted from several factors, including the action of the palatopharyngeal sphincter, higher bolus pressure exerted on the epiglottis and the allometry of increased size. In both transitional and juvenile swallows, the subsequent relaxation of the palatopharyngeal sphincter released the epiglottis, which sprang back to its original intranarial position. r 2008 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved. Keywords: Swallow mechanism; Esophagus; Soft palate; Palatopharyngeal sphincter Introduction Demarest, 1978; Fink et al., 1979; Ekberg and Sigur- jonsson, 1982; Van Daele et al., 1995), pigs and ferrets The epiglottis, the most superior anterior laryngeal (Larson and Herring, 1996), opossums (Thexton and cartilage, folds backward during swallowing in most Crompton, 1998), dogs (Biewener et al., 1985), rabbits adult mammals, including adult humans (Fink and (Ardran et al., 1957), sheep (Amri et al., 1989) and cats (Kobara-Mates et al., 1995). Two known exceptions to this pattern of epiglottal movement are found in adult ÃCorresponding author at: Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University, 98 N. Broadway, Suite 409, opossums when swallowing liquids (Thexton and Baltimore, MD 21231, USA. Crompton, 1998) and in toothed whales (Reidenberg E-mail address: [email protected] (R.Z. German). and Laitman, 1987), the latter being the only mammal 0944-2006/$ - see front matter r 2008 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.zool.2007.10.002 Author's personal copy ARTICLE IN PRESS 340 A.W. Crompton et al. / Zoology 111 (2008) 339–349 known to swallow solid food by sending it around rather In non-human mammals, where the epiglottis than over the epiglottis. Negus (1942, 1949) claims that, flexes during the swallow, it stays in the flexed position when ungulates swallow, both solids and liquids likewise after the bolus has passed over the epiglottis (or when a travel around, rather than over, the epiglottis. However, small bolus remains on the superior surface of the this has never been confirmed radiologically. epiglottis), again suggesting that more than bolus In human infants but not human adults, and in both pressure is involved in retaining the epiglottis in a flexed infants and adults of all other mammals, the larynx is position. Larson and Herring (1996) also show that, intranarial, with the superior cartilages (epiglottis, during the swallow in non-humans, the epiglottis is corniculate) projecting into the nasopharynx (Harding, forced against the soft palate when the larynx is 1984). According to Laitman et al. (1977), young and elevated. They hypothesize that this initiates epiglottal maturing stump-tailed macaques keep ‘‘the larynx flexion but further suggest that an additional mechan- locked in the nasopharynx’’ when drinking water; ism, similar to that reported for human adults, might however, when swallowing milk, the larynx momentarily also be involved in the complete downturning of the unlocks from the nasopharynx and milk passes via the epiglottis. piriform sinuses to the esophagus while the soft palate A relationship between changing anatomy in the elevates to close off the nasopharynx. Similarly, the pharynx and larynx and maturation of the central human newborn infant swallows saliva around rather nervous system has been considered by several research- than over the larynx (Ardran and Kemp, 1952; Ardran ers (Wood Jones, 1940; Bosma, 1985; Crelin, 1987; et al., 1958; Laitman et al., 1977) although, as in the Laitman and Reidenberg, 1993) but has never been fully macaque, a momentary separation of larynx and soft documented. Specifically, little is known about changes palate occurs when swallowing milk (Laitman et al., in epiglottal movement as the infant mammal matures, 1977). It is, however, not known whether the epiglottis although previous work (Crompton et al., 1997) folds down in infant humans and macaques when suggests that there is a change in the path taken by a momentary separation of the larynx and soft palate liquid bolus during the swallow, just prior to weaning. occurs. Conversely, when suckling on a bottle, infant We wished to test the hypothesis that there are pigs collect milk in the oropharynx and in the expanded maturational changes in epiglottal movement as the piriform recesses which then empty during the swallow mammal approaches weaning and that these changes without any downfolding of the epiglottis (Crompton produce alterations in the path taken by liquids. In et al., 1997). addition, we wanted to determine whether any of the Several mechanisms for epiglottal folding in adult various mechanisms proposed for epiglottal movement humans have been proposed (Fink and Demarest, 1978; in humans were valid for any other infant or juvenile Fink et al., 1979; Ekberg and Sigurjonsson, 1982; Van mammals. Daele et al., 1995), the epiglottal movement being considered as having two stages: Materials and methods 1. Movement of the epiglottis to a horizontal position – suggested to occur either as a result of tongue Harvard University IACUC (#23-05) approved all the pressure, as a result of elevation of the larynx or as work performed in this project. The experiments were a result of shortening of the thyroid–hyoid distance, carried out on eight infant domestic pigs (mini-Hanford which causes the thyroid attachment of the base of strain), each 10–30 days old, and six juvenile minipigs the epiglottis to be elevated relative to the hyoid (three Go¨ttingen strain and three mini-Hanford strain), attachment of the hyoepiglottic ligament. each 2–3 months old. Infant pigs wean between 14 and 2. Further downturning of the upper third of the 28 days old (Dritz et al., 1996; Main et al., 2004; Davis epiglottis to cover the laryngeal opening – suggested et al., 2006). to occur either because of the action of laryngeal Radio-opaque markers were attached to, or inserted muscles (Ekberg and Sigurjonsson, 1982) or because in, the following structures: palatopharyngeal arch, of increased tension in the hyoepiglottic ligaments epiglottal tip, thyroid cartilage, hyoid cartilage and, in created by movement of the thyroid cartilage relative some animals, posterior tongue. All surgical procedures to the hyoid bone (Fink and Demarest, 1978; Fink for the insertion or attachment of radio-opaque markers et al., 1979; Van Daele et al., 1995). were carried out under isoflurane anesthesia (3–5% in oxygen) administered by facemask. Several types of The fact that, in adult humans, epiglottal movement markers were used for different purposes. The first, used can occur in the absence of a bolus, as in so-called ‘‘dry to mark the epiglottis, consisted of a tantalum micro- swallows’’, implies an intrinsic mechanism that is not hematological clip (WECK Closure SystemsTM, Re- dependent on the weight or momentum of the swal- search Triangle Park, NC), attached using a custom- lowed bolus. designed hemostat. The shape of these clips allowed the Author's personal copy ARTICLE IN PRESS A.W. Crompton et al. / Zoology 111 (2008) 339–349 341 rotational orientation of the marker to be identified. The of the juvenile minipigs it was only possible to visualize second type of marker, used to mark soft tissue the larynx in lateral view. (German et al., 1992), consisted of 5 mm lengths of At the conclusion of the study, all animals were 0.5 mm diameter wire (96% tin, 4% silver). These wire euthanized using intracardiac injections of pentobarbi- markers were delivered from the cavity of a 20 gauge 300 tal.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    12 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us