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Drooling in cerebral palsy: hypersalivation or dysfunctional oral motor control?
Author(s) -
ERASMUS CORRIE E,
VAN HULST KAREN,
ROTTEVEEL LISELOTTE J C,
JONGERIUS PETER H,
VAN DEN HOOGEN FRANK J A,
ROELEVELD NEL,
ROTTEVEEL JAN J
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
developmental medicine and child neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.658
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1469-8749
pISSN - 0012-1622
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2008.03243.x
Subject(s) - drooling , hypersalivation , gross motor function classification system , cerebral palsy , saliva , dyskinesia , medicine , pediatrics , psychology , audiology , anesthesia , surgery , physical therapy , parkinson's disease , disease
Aim  To investigate whether drooling in children with cerebral palsy (CP) in general and in CP subtypes is due to hypersalivation. Method  Saliva was collected from 61 healthy children (30 males, mean age 9y 5mo [SD 11mo]; 31 females, mean age 9y 6mo [1y 2mo]) and 100 children with CP who drooled (57 males, mean age 9y 5mo [3y 11mo], range 3–19y; 43 females, mean age 10y 1mo [4y 9mo], range 4–19y), of whom 53 had spastic, 42 had dyskinetic, and five had ataxic CP. Almost all children were affected bilaterally, and 90 of them were at Gross Motor Function Classification System levels III or higher. The saliva was collected by the swab saliva collection method. The intensity of drooling was evaluated using the drooling quotient. Results  No difference was found in the flow rates, age, or sex between healthy children and children with CP who drooled. On additional subgroup analysis, the flow rates of children with dyskinetic CP differed statistically from those of healthy children (submandibular p =0.047, parotid p =0.040). Interpretation  This study supports the finding in previous studies that no hypersalivation exists in children with CP who drool. Dysfunctional oral motor control seems to be responsible for saliva overflow from the mouth, whereas increased unstimulated salivary flow may occur in children with dyskinetic CP as a result of hyperkinetic oral movements.

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