The Japanese Dental Science Review | |
Vol. 45 No. 2 2009 | |
ISSN: 1882-7616 UBIC: 99 | |
SUMMARY | |
In today's aging society, dentists are more likely to treat patients with dysphagia and are required to select an optimal treatment option
based on a complete understanding of the swat towing function. Although the tongue plays an important rote in mastication and swat towing as described in human
oral feeding models developed in 1990s, physiological significances of tongue function has been poorly understood due to the difficulty in monitoring and analyzing
it. This review summarizes recent approaches used to evaluate tongue function during swallowing quantitatively mainly focusing on modern sensing methods such as
manofluorography, sensing probes, pressure sensors installed in the palatal plates and ultrasound imaging of tongue movement. Basic understanding on the kinematics
and biomechanics of tongue movement during swat lowing in normal subjects was provided by the series of studies. There have been few studies, however, on the
pathological change of tongue function in dysphagic patients. Therefore further improvement in measurement devices and technologies and additional multidisciplinary
studies are needed to establish therapeutic evidence regarding tongue movement, as well as the best prosthodontic approach for dysphagia rehabilitation.
KEYWORDS: Tongue; Swallowing; Dysphagia; Rehabilitation; Sensing. |
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