Table 4.
Disorders on videofluoroscopic swallow | Posture applied | Rationale |
---|---|---|
Inefficient oral transit | Head back | Gravity to clear oral cavity [22] |
Delay in triggering the pharyngeal swallow | Chin down | Widens valleculae, stop bolus entering airways [23] |
Reduced posterior tongue base movement | Chin down | Pushes the tongue back toward pharyngeal wall [24] |
Unilateral vocal fold palsy, surgical removal of vocal cord (aspiration during swallow) | Head rotated to affect side | Directs bolus down stronger side, improves vocal cold closure [22, 25] |
Reduced closure of laryngeal entrance and vocal folds (aspiration during swallow) | Chin down Head rotated to affect side |
Improves protective position of epiglottis, narrows laryngeal entrance [24] |
Unilateral pharyngeal palsy | Head rotated to affect side | Directs bolus down stronger side of pharynx [24, 25] |
Reduced pharyngeal contraction | Lying down on one side | Eliminating gravity effect on laryngeal residue |
Unilateral oral and pharyngeal weakness | Head rotated to damaged side | Directs bolus down stronger side by gravity |
Cricopharyngeal dysfunction (residue in pyriform sinuses) | Head rotated | Pulls cricoid cartilage from posterior pharyngeal wall reducing pressure at cricopharyngeal junction |