MECHANISMS OF SWALLOWING AND AIRWAY PROTECTION IN INFANT MAMMALS (SUSDOMESTICUS AND MACACA-FASCICULARIS)

Citation
Aw. Crompton et al., MECHANISMS OF SWALLOWING AND AIRWAY PROTECTION IN INFANT MAMMALS (SUSDOMESTICUS AND MACACA-FASCICULARIS), Journal of zoology, 241, 1997, pp. 89-102
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
09528369
Volume
241
Year of publication
1997
Part
1
Pages
89 - 102
Database
ISI
SICI code
0952-8369(1997)241:<89:MOSAAP>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Protection of the airway, necessary for continued respiration, is a pr oblem for mammals because of the relative positions of the oesophageal and laryngeal openings in the pharynx. In human infants, and all othe r mammals, infant and adult, the epiglottis contacts the posterior sur face of the soft palate, providing a continuous passage from the nasop harynx to larynx. The function and movements of the epiglottis during swallows are debated as to whether the epiglottis bends to protect the airway or remains erect and leaves the airway open during the swallow . Using high-speed cineradiography, we examined swallows in detail for a precocious infant, Sus domesticus, the miniature pig, and the more altrical primate, Macaca fascicularis,is. Infant pigs swallowed in two different ways: down the midline of the oropharynx, over a bent epigl ottis, and laterally, around an erect epiglottis, and presumably open airway. The epiglottis of infant macaques never bent, and milk always travelled laterally,through the pyriform recesses and around the laryn x. The macaque airway was closed superiorily, however, when the soft p alate sealed against the posterior pharyngeal wall. A hypothesis that could account for this pattern of swallowing involves an ontogenetic c hange from swallows travelling laterally through the pyriform recesses in young infants to swallows travelling over a bent epiglottis in mor e mature infants. This change would accompany maturation associated wi th weaning and the need to protect the airway from the larger and less fluid boluses of masticated solid food.