JoAnne Robbins, Allison Duke Bridges, and Andrew Taylor: Oral, pharyngeal and esophageal motor function in aging. GI Motility online (2006) doi:10.1038/gimo39
下記のHPで全文見ることができますので、presbyphagia(老嚥)に関心のある方はぜひ読んでみてください。サルコペニアによる嚥下障害とかなり関連があります。
http://www.nature.com/gimo/contents/pt1/full/gimo39.html
この論文では何度もpresbyphagia(老嚥)という言葉が出てきます。また、presbyesophagus(老人性食道機能低下)という言葉も出てきます。これは1960年代に造られた言葉だそうです。
Weblio英和辞典でもpresbyesophagusは、加齢による食道括約筋の収縮力低下、老人性食道、老人食道という訳語があります。でもpresbyphagiaは登録されていないので、presbyesophagusのほうがメジャーな言葉かもしれません。
http://ejje.weblio.jp/content/presbyesophagus
Key Points
- Presbyphagia refers to age-related changes in the oropharyngeal and esophageal swallowing of healthy adults.
- Sarcopenia is age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass, organization, and strength.
- Good health is maintained in the presence of disease-free presbyphagia.
- Healthy persons depend on a highly automated neuromuscular sensorimotor process that coordinates chewing, swallowing, and airway protection.
- Central and peripheral nervous system changes with age affect swallowing.
- Oropharyngeal swallowing changes with healthy aging:
- Slower
- Delayed onset of airway protection and upper esophageal sphincter (UES) opening
- Bolus adjacent to airway longer
- Reduced lingual pressures
- Esophageal swallowing changes with aging:
- Duration of esophageal peristalsis is prolonged and amplitude decreases (60–80 years).
- Esophageal contraction amplitude diminishes but function remains intact (80-90 years).
- Reduced frequency of secondary peristalsis
- Increased reflux events in elders
- Although compensatory interventions are traditional, exercise is promising to remediate and perhaps prevent decline in function.
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