Introduction
Dysphagia is a common disorder that can occur as a result of various neurological disorders, such as cerebrovascular accidents, head injuries, and degenerative diseases [
1]. Protection of the laryngeal airway, which is crucial for safe and efficient swallowing, is frequently impaired in dysphagia, leading to invasion of food material or liquid into the larynx [
2]. Such conditions may cause various complications, including respiratory morbidity or even death [
3]. Invasion limited to above the vocal folds is called penetration, while aspiration means that the invaded bolus enters the deeper airway below the vocal folds [
1]. Penetration has not received much attention from researchers because it is a milder form of airway invasion that can occur even in about 10% of normal adults [
4]. However, penetration can still be hazardous to pulmonary health especially when it is repeated and goes deeper in the laryngeal vestibule [
5]. In a previous report, approximately two-thirds of patients with aspiration pneumonia showed laryngeal penetration [
6]. In other study that correlated VFSS (videofluoroscopic swallowing study) findings and clinical data, patients with laryngeal penetration were four times more likely to have pneumonia within 6 months before or after VFSS examination [
7]. Considering those reports, it is believed that the clinicians should pay more attention to prevention or reduction of penetration when taking care of the patients with dysphagia.
Treatment of dysphagia has traditionally been differentiated into restorative and compensatory strategies [
8]. Restorative therapy is centered on accelerating the recovery process, and compensatory techniques are centered on keeping patients safe when swallowing [
9]. Among the compensatory techniques, chin tuck (also known as chin down or neck flexion) is one of the methods most widely used to prevent instances of airway invasion of food material such as penetration or aspiration [
3]. With chin tuck, airway protection can be improved by posterior shift of the anterior pharyngeal structures, which narrows the laryngeal entrance by shortening the distance from epiglottis to the pharyngeal wall and widening the angle of the epiglottis to the anterior wall of the trachea [
1,
10,
11]. Patients with delayed swallowing trigger have been demonstrated to benefit of preventing aspiration from this maneuver [
12]. However, despite its clinical popularity, it was found that the chin tuck eliminates aspiration in only 8–50% of cases with neurologic disorders in previous studies [
13‐
15]. It was also suggested that the chin tuck can prevent aspiration in the context of a few favorable conditions, including female sex, absence of residue in the pyriform sinus, delayed swallowing trigger, reduced laryngeal elevation, and penetration of thin liquid [
12].
Although a number of studies have been performed to explore the effectiveness of the chin tuck maneuver, most of them investigated the effectiveness by observing the presence or elimination of aspiration, rather than measuring its severity or depth [
9,
12‐
14]. Only one study included the patients with penetration, in which the presence of effect was defined as decrease in more than or equal to 1.0 of 8-point penetration-aspiration scale (PAS) [
3]. However, PAS is only a semi-quantitative scale measuring the depth of penetration and aspiration from the videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS) and the score 2–5 corresponds to penetration [
16]. In PAS, penetration is graded according to removal and contact with vocal cords, rather than measuring the depth of penetration precisely [
16]. It seems that more objective and quantitative assessment is required to verify whether the chin tuck is effective in preventing or reducing penetration that may increase the risk of pneumonia [
6,
7]. Currently, the videofluoroscopic swallowing study (VFSS) is regarded as a standard evaluation tool that permits direct visualization and objective evaluation of bolus transfer and swallowing events [
15]. The aims of this study are to reveal the effect of the chin tuck maneuver on the severity of penetration by quantitating the depth of penetration from the images of VFSS and to identify the factors affecting the efficacy of chin tuck maneuver.
Discussion
Previous studies reported that laryngeal penetration is associated with the risk of aspiration pneumonia when it is found in VFSS [
6,
7]. Moreover, deep penetration has been reported to be a predictor of aspiration at least in children [
5]. Risk of complication may not be great in penetration, because bolus does not enter airway beyond vocal cords. There is a possibility that VFSS failed to find aspiration or penetration progressed to aspiration after examination in those studies. Even if it is true, occurrence of penetration may suggest a risk of more severe form of airway invasion in the context of swallowing safety. Therefore, clinicians should pay attention to management of penetration especially when the patient shows symptoms related to dysphagia. Behavioral treatments, including chin tuck, have been demonstrated to prevent aspiration in approximately half of patients with dysphagia [
20], but their effect on penetration is still not clear. The present study tried to investigate whether the chin tuck can prevent or reduce the laryngeal penetration in the patients with swallowing difficulties.
Most of the studies related to the effectiveness of chin tuck-used PAS, a semi-quantitative ordinal scale that is most commonly used to determine the severity of penetration and aspiration [
16]. The depth of airway invasion can be graded by PAS, according to the location and remnant of food material mixed with contrast media, which is visualized in VFSS images [
18]. However, PAS is basically an interval scale that is still insufficient to reflect subtle changes in penetration, especially when it is within the intervals between grades. Penetration depth was measured directly from VFSS images in the present study, rather than being scaled, to overcome this limitation of PAS. To eliminate errors from individual variations in size, the ratio of the penetration depth to the length of the epiglottis, namely, the penetration ratio, was calculated. The authors believe that the penetration ratio can reflect the change in penetration depth more precisely than PAS. Consequently, it is also believed that this study demonstrated the effectiveness of chin tuck more accurately than most previous studies in which the chin tuck maneuver was considered effective only when penetration or aspiration was prevented [
9,
12‐
15]. This method has never been attempted previously to the authors’ knowledge. The reliability of this new method also has been tested and the results showed excellent intra- and inter-rater agreement. However, the depth and length measurement, inevitably the ratio calculation, used in the present study can be affected by the position of the epiglottis. They could be measured consistently because all subjects showed penetration during swallowing before inversion of epiglottis. It should be verified whether their measurement is still reliable when the penetration occurs before or after swallow or when the epiglottis is inverted.
The severity of penetration, represented by the penetration ratio, was decreased as a result of the chin tuck maneuver but only by a very small amount in this study. Moreover, a decrease was found in only approximately one-third of the subjects. These results coincide with previous studies regarding the effectiveness of chin tuck for the amelioration of aspiration [
13‐
15]. Chin tuck has been used almost routinely for managing airway invasion in patients with dysphagia, but related studies including the authors’ suggest that clinicians should be cautious in conducting such customary practice and monitor the efficacy in individual patients. If possible, instrumental examination is warranted which can show the effect objectively.
In the comparison between the effective and ineffective groups, the former group showed significantly less amount of residue accumulation in the vallecula and pyriform sinuses, in both neutral and chin tuck position. None of the other parameters of VFSS showed any difference between the groups. Chin tuck decreased the severity of residue in both groups, but the underlying mechanism is not clear. The preceding studies also demonstrated conflicting results about the effect of chin tuck on the pharyngeal contraction [
21,
22]. It is unlikely that the chin tuck effect appeared by reducing the residue because both groups showed decrease. However, the results suggest that the patients with less amount of residue in valleculae and pharynx may be better candidates for chin tuck. Although a number of conditions, such as delay in the swallowing trigger, reduced laryngeal elevation and penetration of thin liquids [
12], and female sex [
3], were previously proposed to favor the effectiveness of chin tuck, the effectiveness of chin tuck was not affected by those conditions in this study. It is speculated that these factors may not influence the effectiveness of chin tuck in patents with penetration only.
This study has some limitations. First, the depth of penetration and length of the epiglottis were measured in straight lines despite their curved forms. The straight distance may not be identical to the true length of penetration, but it would be reasonable to think that they are proportional to each other. Second, only the immediate effect of the chin tuck maneuver was measured, and the effectiveness of this maneuver after enough training still needs further research. As a compensatory technique, presence of long-term effect is still controversial. Previous studies revealed that the duration of laryngeal vestibule closure increases in chin tuck position, but returns to baseline after resuming neutral position [
23,
24]. However, repetition and training may affect the effectiveness because proper positioning is a key to benefit from chin tuck [
3]. Prevention of possible later complications also need to be investigated in further researches. Third, patients with insufficient chin tuck were excluded, but the neck flexion angle was not measured exactly, making the results vulnerable to possible selection bias. Changes in cervical vertebral curvature, which is especially common in elderly patients, are likely to make it difficult to maintain the proper chin tuck posture, further limiting its effectiveness. Fourth, since all penetration occurred during swallow before inversion of epiglottis in the present study, the measuring method may not be used when the penetration occurs in other timing. Lastly, effect of the timing of penetration on the effectiveness of chin tuck could not be analyzed because all penetrations occurred during swallow.
Publisher's Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.