Automatic Assesssment for Modified Barium Swallow Process
Dysphagia is the condition of abnormal swallowing occurring
when the liquid or food bolus is incorrectly transported
through the orophayngeal region. There are several causes
leading to patients becoming dysphagic, these include
Parkinson's disease, stroke, and other neurodegenerative
diseases. A Modified Barium Swallow Study (MBSS) with
capturing fluoroscopic images during swallowing is the
current gold standard technique for the assessment of
dysphagia. At present, there is no software tool to accurately
determine transit times of bolus activity directly from
fluoroscopic images. Lack of such a software tool introduces
inconsistencies in assessment between various clinicians
(inter-variability) and even with the same clinician over
time (intra-variability).
In this project, a software tool will be developed for spatial
and temporal analysis of fluoroscopic images in order to
accurately assess various swallow dysfunction variables,
including hyolaryngeal excursion, pharyngeal transit time,
oral transit time, valleculae stasis, pyriform recess stasis,
timing of aspiration/penetration event, oral stasis, onset of
pharyngeal stage swallow, and degree of soft palate movement.
The software tool will employ various image-processing
techniques (e.g., active contour and optical flow methods) to
track and register the movements of the anatomical structures.
It is our hope that this software tool will be a step towards
the standardization of the swallow dysfunction assessment.