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Method Article
Botulinum toxin is injected into the salivary glands for the treatment of sialorrhea. The ultrasound-guided botulinum toxin injection in both the parotid and submandibular glands demonstrates a sustained efficacy and the absence of serious side effects.
Neurological diseases can be complicated by sialorrhea, an excessive flow of saliva. Patients suffering from moderate to severe sialorrhea have an impaired quality of life, often worsened by correlated complications such as aspiration pneumonia, oral infections, dental caries, and maceration of the skin. Diverse therapeutic approaches have been proposed for the treatment of sialorrhea, including surgery and the use of anticholinergic agents, with limited results and the possible occurrence of serious adverse events. Recently, botulinum toxin (BoNT) injection within the major salivary glands has been proposed in patients refractory to anticholinergic therapy, with the aim of inhibiting local acetylcholine release and gland activity.
In order to obtain a better outcome in terms of reduction of saliva production, efficacy, duration, and avoidance of major adverse events, we developed an ultrasound-guided BoNT-type A injection technique accurately described in the text. Here we present a method of treating sialorrhea with bilateral parotid and submandibular gland BoNT-type A injections under ultrasound guidance. Four quadrants of the parotid gland and two quadrants of the submandibular gland are visualized and injected using two accesses and one access, respectively.
The ultrasound-guided procedure provides a simple, non-invasive, real-time visualization of the muscular and glandular tissues and their surrounding structures, optimizing treatment efficacy and safety.
Sialorrhea is an excessive flow of saliva representing a common and disabling complication of several neurological disorders, including stroke, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, and neurodegenerative diseases1. Patients suffering from moderate to severe sialorrhea have an impaired quality of life, often worsened by correlated complications, such as aspiration pneumonia, oral infections, dental caries, and maceration of the skin2. Various therapeutic options are available for the treatment of sialorrhea, ranging from surgery to pharmacological therapy, with the aim of reducing saliva production.
Surgical options include denervation, excision of the salivary glands, and transposition or ligation of the salivary ducts3,4. However, despite its efficacy, surgery is by definition an invasive procedure with potentially serious adverse events, such as salivary fistula and cyst formation, infections, loss of taste, loss of hearing, dysarthria, and irreversible effects on salivary gland production3. In addition, it has been observed that surgical approaches may have only temporary efficacy due to reinnervation of the salivary glands two or more years after the procedure2,5. A more common and less invasive treatment for severe sialorrhea is the use of systemic drugs with anticholinergic properties. However, the chronic use of anticholinergic agents is often associated with systemic side effects such as confusion, memory problems, drowsiness, urinary retention, and paralytic ileus2,5.
Botulinum toxin (BoNT) salivary injection is an emerging treatment option for sialorrhea. BoNT are proteases (seven, from A to G), produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum, that are able to halt acetylcholine release from the presynaptic nerve terminals of the neuromuscular junction, blocking muscle contraction and gland activity at the orthosympathetic and parasympathetic postganglionic synapses. BoNT type A (BoNT-A) and type B (BoNT-B) are commonly used for therapeutic management of dystonia and spasticity6. Recently, BoNT injection within the major salivary glands proved to be a useful therapeutic option in moderate to severe sialorrhea with suboptimal response to other medical therapies due to a lack of efficacy or the presence of significant side effects2,7,8.
Human salivary glands are classified into two groups: major and minor. Major salivary glands include a pair of parotid glands, a pair of submandibular glands, and a pair of sublingual glands; the minor salivary glands consist of about 1,000 small glands spread within the sub-mucosa of the oral cavity9. Approximately 0.5 liters of saliva are secreted per day. The three pairs of major salivary glands are responsible for more than 90% of the saliva production, approximately divided as follows: 20% for the parotid glands, 65% for the submandibular glands and 5%, for the sublingual glands9. The parotid gland is the largest one and is located below the external acoustic meatus, between the mandible and the sternocleidomastoid muscle; it projects forward on the surface of the masseter muscle10. Important structures pass through the gland, such as the facial nerve, external carotid artery, and retromandibular vein, and several other important neurovascular structures are close to the gland. The submandibular gland is a seromucous gland situated behind and below the ramus of the mandible, in the region of the submandibular triangle, between the anterior and posterior bellies of the digastric muscle and around the posterior border of the mylohyoid muscle11.
BoNT salivary gland injection is a local treatment with the potential to avoid discomfort and/or systemic side effects correlated with the other therapies, such as oral, transdermal, and surgical options. Here, we show a reliable and easily reproducible method to treat sialorrhea with BoNT-A injections in the parotid and submandibular glands under ultrasound (US) guidance in order to obtain a satisfying and long-lasting reduction of drooling while strongly limiting the occurrence of serious adverse events. Data on BoNT-A injection efficacy in sialorrhea in the absence of US guidance are reported in the literature12; however, the US-guided identification of glands and their surrounding tissues, along with real-time visualization of the needle position, allows for a reduction in adverse events and a more accurate injection, leading to increased efficacy and outcome reproducibility7,13.
Here, we technically describe the method used for the treatment of sialorrhea in patients with neurological dysphagia. We will not focus on efficacy results, which have been published previously7. In this paper, in the results section, we present data from 5 consecutive patients with long-term follow-up (3 treatment sessions) treated from 2014 to 2016. These patients are considered representative of the entire population, which consists of the botulinum toxin service of San Luigi Gonzaga Hospital. The protocol was approved and follows the guidelines of the local ethical standards committee on human experimentation.
1. Patients' Recruitment
NOTE: Patients eligible for this approach are adults suffering from moderate to severe sialorrhea secondary to neurological dysphagia with a history of failure or contraindication to pharmacological treatments such as anticholinergic drugs.
2. Procedure
The US-guided injection is an effective technique to obtain real-time and precise needle visualization for BoNT administration in the salivary glands. This approach provides a reliable sialorrhea treatment, with prolonged efficacy and the absence of serious adverse events. Indeed, the visualization of the glands and of the needle penetration provided by the US-guided approach proposed here allows a widespread administration of BoNT-A within the major salivary glands with significant and l...
This protocol describes US-guided BoNT-A injection in the parotid and submandibular glands for the treatment of moderate to severe sialorrhea. Sialorrhea secondary to dysphagia is a frequent complication of the advanced stages of different neurological diseases, and when pharmacological therapy with anticholinergic agents demonstrates scarce efficacy or tolerability, salivary gland BoNT injection represents a useful therapeutic option2,7. However, salivary gland BoNT injection guided by anatomical landmarks ma...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank the patients who gave their consent and contributed to the publication.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
abobotulinumtoxinA (Dysport) | IpsenBiopharm, Wrexham, UK | Delivered drug | |
MyLab Twice | Esaote | Ultraonograph | |
LA523 5–10 MHz | Esaote | Linear transducer |
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