Oral motor dysfunction and visual perception Flashcards

1
Q

What are the phases of normal oral feeding, and when does each start?

A

preparatory phase- food in mouth
oral phase- food in mouth and labial seal maintained
pharyngeal phase- begins with triggering pharyngeal swallow (when bolus passes anterior faucial arches)
esophageal phase- entry of bolus through cricopharyngeal region (8-20 secs in adults, 3-10 sec in infants)

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2
Q

t/f, we tend to use a rotary lateral movement of manipulation and mastication when eating

A

true, use rotary lateral movements

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3
Q

t/f, airway is closed and larynx and pharynx are at rest during the oral phase

A

false, the airway is still open at this point but the larynx and pharynx ARE at rest

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4
Q

the pharygneal swallow is triggered when the food bolus passes the ____ ____ _____

A

anterior faucial arches

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5
Q

During what phase does airway protection occur?

A

pharygneal phase

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6
Q

What three things occur during airway protection?

A
  1. ELEVATION AND ANTERIOR displacement of the larynx to prevent material from entering the airway
  2. Epiglottis DESCENDS and covers laryngeal aditus (vocal folds close)
  3. respiration stops
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7
Q

Passage of bolus through pharynx takes less than ___ second(s)

A

1 second

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8
Q

What are 7 anatomical differences b/w a newborn and adult mouth and pharynx?

A
  1. NB jaw is low, small and retracted
  2. tongue fills entire small oral cavity
  3. infant inner cheeks contain fatty sucking pads
  4. infant tongue movement is forward and backwards -> suckling
  5. obligate nose breathers since epiglottis and soft palate are IN CONTACT
  6. larynx much higher in NB
  7. horizontal eustachian tubes-> increased ear infections
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9
Q

What are three suggestions you should give to older adults/ people with dysphagia to maintain safe eating?

A
  1. decrease size of bolus
  2. chew more thoroughly
  3. minimize distractions
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10
Q

_____: difficulty chewing, maintaining lip closure, and clearing food/liquid from spaces in the oral cavity, may also have pre-swallowing aspiration
_____: weakness, slowness, or incoordination of the oral-pharyngeal motor system. Severity varies from inefficient handling of food or liquids to aspiration

A

oral stage problems
dysphagia

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11
Q

t/f, aspirated food contents with acid from GERD are very likely to cause pneumonia and lung damage

A

true

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12
Q

What are 4 symptoms that would indicate reflux/GERD leading to aspiration?

A
  1. arching during feeding
  2. bad breath
  3. vomiting blood, night vomiting
  4. irritability
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13
Q

t/f, adults can handle aspirating 10-20% of what we swallow

A

true

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14
Q

t/f, you will see aspiration during or after swallow during the oral phase

A

false, will only see aspiration before the initiation of the pharyngeal swallow, aspiration during or after occurs in pharyngeal phase

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15
Q

What are 5 potential problems that can occur during the oral phase of feeding?

A
  1. reduced labial closure
  2. reduced lateral and vertical range of tongue movement (ROM, strength, coordination)
  3. reduced buccal tension
  4. reduced oral sensitivity
  5. oral hypersensitivity
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16
Q

What are 5 potential problems that can occur during the pharyngeal phase of feeding?

A
  1. delayed or absent pharyngeal swallow
  2. inadequate elevation of soft palate
  3. reduced laryngeal closure
  4. reduced laryngeal elevation
  5. upper esophagus sphincter dysfunction
17
Q

What two potential problems can occur during the esophageal phase?

A

reflux
reduced peristalsis

18
Q

What are 4 recommendations for optimal swallowing in adults?

A
  1. 90 degrees upright
  2. head tilted slightly forward
  3. support weaker side so that it is elevated above stronger side if pt is asymmetrical
  4. relaxed position, minimize the effect of abnormal tone and reflexes
19
Q

t/f, chin down is a good compensatory posture for pts with delayed pharyngeal swallow

A

true, this helps protect their airways

20
Q

t/f, head forward is a good compensatory posture for patients with poor lingual motility for posterior bolus transport but that have good airway closure and pharyngeal clearance

A

false, head BACK helps with this

21
Q

t/f, we want to rotate a pts head TOWARD the side of impairment to prevent bolus transport through the weaker side

A

true

22
Q

t/f, we want to tip a pts head to the unimpaired side to provide more pharyngeal clearance for a pt with unilateral impairment of the pharynx

A

true

23
Q

How do you perform the supraglottic swallow?

A
  1. Take a deep breath and hold it.
  2. Put a small bite of food or a sip of liquid into your mouth.
  3. Swallow (keep holding your breath).
  4. Cough right after you swallow.
  5. Swallow again.
  6. Breathe.
24
Q

At what age do children start rotary chewing?

A

18-24 months

25
Q

Which visual defect is caused by lesions in tract or unilateral primary visual cortex?

A

hemianopsia