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Text
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URL Address
<a href="http://doi.org/10.1007/s00455-016-9778-7" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">http://doi.org/10.1007/s00455-016-9778-7</a>
Pages
73–77
Issue
1
Volume
32
Dublin Core
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Title
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Animal Models for Dysphagia Studies: What Have We Learnt So Far.
Publisher
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Dysphagia
Date
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2017
2017-02
Subject
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*Animal models; *Deglutition; *Deglutition disorders; *Disease Models; *Pathophysiology; *Performance; Animal; Animals; Biological; Biomedical Research/*methods; Deglutition – Physiology; Deglutition Disorders – Physiopathology; Deglutition Disorders/*physiopathology; Deglutition/physiology; Humans; Medical – Methods; Models; Research
Creator
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German Rebecca Z; Crompton A W; Gould Francois D H; Thexton Allan J
Description
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Research using animal models has contributed significantly to realizing the goal of understanding dysfunction and improving the care of patients who suffer from dysphagia. But why should other researchers and the clinicians who see patients day in and day out care about this work? Results from studies of animal models have the potential to change and grow how we think about dysphagia research and practice in general, well beyond applying specific results to human studies. Animal research provides two key contributions to our understanding of dysphagia. The first is a more complete characterization of the physiology of both normal and pathological swallow than is possible in human subjects. The second is suggesting of specific, physiological, targets for development and testing of treatment interventions to improve dysphagia outcomes.
Identifier
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<a href="http://doi.org/10.1007/s00455-016-9778-7" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">10.1007/s00455-016-9778-7</a>
Rights
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Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).
*Animal models
*Deglutition
*Deglutition disorders
*Disease Models
*Pathophysiology
*Performance
2017
Animal
Animals
Biological
Biomedical Research/*methods
Crompton A W
Deglutition – Physiology
Deglutition Disorders – Physiopathology
Deglutition Disorders/*physiopathology
Deglutition/physiology
Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology
Dysphagia
German Rebecca Z
Gould François D H
Humans
Medical – Methods
Models
NEOMED College of Medicine
Research
Thexton Allan J