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Published in: Dysphagia 6/2022

01-03-2022 | Dysphagia | Original Article

Cervical Vertebral Height Approximates Hyoid Displacement in Videofluoroscopic Images of Healthy Adults

Authors: Amanda S. Mahoney, Yassin Khalifa, Erin Lucatorto, Ervin Sejdić, James L. Coyle

Published in: Dysphagia | Issue 6/2022

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Abstract

Clinicians and researchers commonly judge the completeness of hyoid displacement from videofluoroscopic swallow study (VFSS) videos. Judgments made during the clinical exam are often subjective, and post-examination analysis reduces the measure’s immediate value. This study aimed to determine the validity and feasibility of a visual, anatomically scaled benchmark for judging complete hyoid displacement during a VFSS. The third and fourth cervical vertebral bodies (C3 and C4) lie at roughly the same vertical position as the hyoid body and are strongly correlated with patient height. We hypothesized that anterior and superior displacement of the hyoid bone would approximate the height of one C3 or C4 body during safe swallows. Trained raters marked points of interest on C3, C4, and the hyoid body on 1414 swallows of adult patients with suspected dysphagia (n = 195) and 50 swallows of age-matched healthy participants (n = 17), and rated Penetration Aspiration Scale scores. Results indicated that the mean displacements of the hyoid bone were greater than one C3 unit in the superior direction for all swallows from patient and healthy participants, though significantly and clinically greater in healthy participant swallows (p < .001, d > .8). The mean anterior and superior displacements from patient and healthy participant swallows were greater than one C4 unit. Results show preliminary evidence that use of the C3 and/or C4 anatomic scalars can add interpretive value to the immediate judgment of hyoid displacement during the conduct of a clinical VFSS examination.
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Metadata
Title
Cervical Vertebral Height Approximates Hyoid Displacement in Videofluoroscopic Images of Healthy Adults
Authors
Amanda S. Mahoney
Yassin Khalifa
Erin Lucatorto
Ervin Sejdić
James L. Coyle
Publication date
01-03-2022
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Dysphagia / Issue 6/2022
Print ISSN: 0179-051X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0460
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00455-022-10414-8

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