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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How normal swallowing works in dogs explained

By Watrous, B. J. & Suter, P. F.·Published in Veterinary Radiology·1979·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Normal Swallowing in the Dog: A Cineradiographic Study

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

This study looked at how dogs swallow food and the different stages involved in the process. It found that swallowing happens in three main phases: the first involves getting the food ready in the mouth, the second is when the food moves down the esophagus, and the third is when it passes into the stomach. The researchers noted that if a dog swallows too quickly, food can build up in the esophagus, but this is usually not a problem. They also discovered that using low doses of tranquilizers didn't change how dogs swallow. Overall, the study showed that dogs have a normal swallowing process that works well, even if they are in different positions while eating.

Abstract

Normal dog swallowing dynamics were analyzed and correlated with specific structures. There were oropharyngeal, esophageal, and gastroesophageal phases. The oropharyngeal phase was characterized by food prehension and bolus formation (oral stage), reflex pharyngeal peristalsis (pharyngeal stage), and reflex cricopharyngeal sphincter relaxation (cricopharyngeal stage). The esophageal phase was characterized by primary peristalsis initiated by the oropharyngeal phase and secondary peristalsis which occurred in response to mechanical stimuli from a bolus in the esophagus. There was a post‐peristalsis refractory period during which new peristalsis would not occur. Repeated rapid swallowing would, therefore, result in accumulation of ingesta in the esophagus. The gastroesophageal phase occurred when a bolus passed through the gastroesophageal junction, an area which serves as a lower esophageal sphincter. Gastroesophageal reflux was observed as a normal, infrequent event followed by rapid esophageal clearance. Low doses of tranquilizers had no significant influence on swallowing function. The differences observed between sternal and lateral recumbent postures related only to the rate of food consumption which, in turn, influenced esophageal motor response and inhibited gastroesophageal closure. These differences did not adversely affect the autonomous phases of swallowing.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1740-8261.1979.tb01187.x