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Pressure profile similarities between tongue resistance training tasks and liquid swallows

Steele, Catriona M; Bailey, Gemma L; Molfenter, Sonja M; Yeates, Erin M; Grace-Martin, Karen
Tongue-pressure resistance training is known to increase tongue strength in seniors and individuals with stroke-related dysphagia. However, evidence of associated functional improvements in swallowing is equivocal. We investigated similarities in pressure waveform profiles between swallowing and several tongue-palate pressure tasks to identify tasks that may be best suited for inclusion in tongue-pressure resistance training protocols for patients who are unable to safely perform real bolus swallows in treatment. Tongue-palate pressures were recorded in 20 healthy young adults. Participants performed water and nectar-thick juice swallows, effortful and noneffortful saliva swallows, and "half-maximum" tongue-palate partial-pressure tasks emphasizing either anterior or posterior tongue-palate contact at different speeds. Pressure slopes (amplitude change over time) during the pressure application (rise) and withdrawal (release) phases were analyzed. A subset of four tasks with the greatest similarity in slope characteristics to those seen in bolus swallows was identified: anterior-emphasis half-maximum tongue-palate presses, posterior-emphasis maximum isometric tongue-palate presses, posterior-emphasis half-maximum slow tongue-palate presses, and effortful saliva swallows. We propose that future research should explore the degree to which swallowing improvements are obtained from treatment protocols that emphasize these tasks.
PMID: 21110261
ISSN: 0748-7711
CID: 1047092

Maladaptive Physiological Changes in a Case of Chronic, Profound Dysphagia [Meeting Abstract]

Molfenter, Sonja M; Steele, C
ISI:000284642300139
ISSN: 0179-051x
CID: 2263132

Age-Related Differences in Tongue Pressure Modulation Between Water And Nectar-Thick Juice Swallows [Meeting Abstract]

Steele, Catriona M; Bailey, G; Cliffe, R; Griffin, M; Kates; Molfenter, S; Moore, M; Waito, A
ISI:000284642300147
ISSN: 0179-051x
CID: 2263142

Sensitivity and Specificity of a Standardized Swallow Screening Protocol: Validation Against Concurrent Videofluoroscopy [Meeting Abstract]

Steele, Catriona M; Chau, T; Bailey, G; Bennett, J; Buesselberg, N; Cliffe, R; Molfenter, S; Takeuchi, M; Waito, A; Weeda, A; Zoratto, D
ISI:000284642300026
ISSN: 0179-051x
CID: 2263112

Hyoid and Laryngeal Movement in Swallowing: are they Positively Correlated? [Meeting Abstract]

Molfenter, Sonja M; Zoratto, D; Waito, A; Chau, T; Steele, C
ISI:000284642300138
ISSN: 0179-051x
CID: 2263122

OUTCOMES OF A TONGUE PRESSURE EXERCISE TREATMENT PROTOCOL IN ACQUIRED NEUROGENIC DYSPHAGIA [Meeting Abstract]

Molfenter, Sonja; Bailey, G; Buesselberg, N; Cliffe, R; Yeates, E; Steele, C
ISI:000272911100071
ISSN: 0179-051x
CID: 2744022

Rationale for Strength and Skill Goals in Tongue Resistance Training: A Review

Steele, Catriona M; Molfenter, Sonja; Bailey, Gemma L; Yeates, Erin
ORIGINAL:0012930
ISSN: 1940-7556
CID: 3292722

Decreasing the knowledge-to-action gap through research-clinical partnerships in speech-language pathology

Molfenter, Sonja M; Ammoury, A; Yeates, EM; Steele, CM
ORIGINAL:0011573
ISSN: 1913-200x
CID: 2703012

Improvements in tongue strength and pressure-generation precision following a tongue-pressure training protocol in older individuals with dysphagia: three case reports [Case Report]

Yeates, Erin M; Molfenter, Sonja M; Steele, Catriona M
Dysphagia, or difficulty swallowing, often occurs secondary to conditions such as stroke, head injury or progressive disease, many of which increase in frequency with advancing age. Sarcopenia, the gradual loss of muscle bulk and strength, can place older individuals at greater risk for dysphagia. Data are reported for three older participants in a pilot trial of a tongue-pressure training therapy. During the experimental therapy protocol, participants performed isometric strength exercises for the tongue as well as tongue pressure accuracy tasks. Biofeedback was provided using the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI), an instrument that measures tongue pressure. Treatment outcome measures show increased isometric tongue strength, improved tongue pressure generation accuracy, improved bolus control on videofluoroscopy, and improved functional dietary intake by mouth. These preliminary results indicate that, for these three adults with dysphagia, tongue-pressure training was beneficial for improving both instrumental and functional aspects of swallowing. The experimental treatment protocol holds promise as a rehabilitative tool for various dysphagia populations.
PMCID:2682406
PMID: 19281066
ISSN: 1176-9092
CID: 1047102

How'd you get that accent?: Acquiring a second dialect of the same language

Tagliamonte, Sali A; Molfenter, Sonja
This article presents a case study of second dialect acquisition by three children over six years as they shift from Canadian to British English. Informed by Chambers's principles of second dialect acquisition, the analysis focuses on a frequent and socially embedded linguistic feature, T-voicing (e.g., pudding versus putting). An extensive corpus and quantitative methods permit tracking the shift to British English as it is happening. Although all of the children eventually sound local, the acquisition process is complex. Frequency of British variants rises incrementally, lagging behind the acquisition of variable constraints, which are in turn ordered by type. Internal patterns are acquired early, while social correlates lag behind. Acceleration of second dialect variants occurs at well-defined sociocultural milestones, particularly entering the school system. Successful second dialect acquisition is a direct consequence of sustained access to and integration with the local speech community. (Second dialect acquisition, child language variation, T-voicing, mobility)
ISI:000250663500001
ISSN: 0047-4045
CID: 2744012