Multidisciplinary Management of Swallowing Disorders
Everyone has trouble swallowing from time to time, such as choking while eating or drinking. People with swallowing disorders (dysphagia) regularly have difficulty swallowing, which can lead to choking, malnutrition, and other problems.
Swallowing is a complex process, with many nerves working to coordinate the muscles of the mouth, throat, and esophagus. A wide range of conditions, illnesses, and their treatments can disrupt this process, causing difficulty swallowing.
Serving the Dallas/Fort Worth area and beyond, our fellowship-trained laryngologists (ear, nose, and throat doctors with specialized training in disorders of the larynx) and speech-language pathologists have advanced training and years of expertise in care for swallowing disorders. We quickly determine the cause of the difficulty, and we often work with gastroenterologists (specialists in digestive disorders) to coordinate care for our patients.
Causes of Swallowing Disorders
Dysphagia can result from a wide variety of problems, which typically affect the esophagus differently from the mouth and throat. The categories of swallowing disorders and their causes include:
Mouth and throat dysphagia
Esophageal dysphagia
- Achalasia, when the lower esophageal sphincter (ring of muscle) doesn’t open properly to pass food to the stomach
- Diffuse spasm, which is abnormal spasms of the esophagus muscles
- Esophageal cancer and radiation therapy to treat it
- Esophageal ring, an abnormal ring of tissue that forms in the lower esophagus
- Esophageal structure (narrowing), usually resulting from scar tissue caused by radiation, chemicals, medicines, chronic swelling, ulcers, or infection
- Esophageal tumors, either cancerous or noncancerous
- Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
- Something stuck in the esophagus, such as a piece of food
- Scleroderma, a disorder in which the immune system mistakenly attacks tissue in the esophagus
Symptoms of Swallowing Disorders
Signs and symptoms of dysphagia can include:
- Cough or gag reflex when swallowing
- Food or stomach acid that backs up into the throat
- Frequent heartburn
- Hoarseness
- Inability to swallow
- Pain while swallowing
- Regurgitation (food that comes back up)
- Sensation of food stuck in the throat or chest
- Unexplained weight loss