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92 Dysphagia: A Hard Pill to Swallow – Instructor Guide

Dysphagia: A Hard Pill to Swallow

Instructional Guide

The purpose of this lecture is to discuss the anatomy involved in swallowing, what a swallowing disease can look like, and how we would treat the issue.

Intended Grade Level

This lesson is for students in the 9th- 12th grade. Students should be familiar with general anatomy of the GI system, such as the esophagus, stomach, intestines. Students should also be familiar with basic scientific terminology.

Learning objectives

  • Describe the anatomy involved in swallowing
  • Explain causes for dysphagia in canines and how to diagnose it
  • Explain ways to treat dysphagia
  • Identify when a dog is showing signs of dysphagia v. regurgitation v. vomiting

Lesson Format

Student page

This can be done in any size group. The material can be printed and disseminated for the read-aloud. Activities require a printer and colors.

  • First students will popcorn read the section on absorbing food.(15 minutes)
  • Next, students will color the digestive system based on the material learned, they can work in small groups or independently. (25 minutes)
  • The assessment will focus on explaining their drawings to family members (5 minutes)

Lesson Background

Dysphagia is the inability to properly swallow. There can be multiple causes, which will be discussed in detail, but the end result will be the same: the animal cannot swallow. This is distinct from regurgitation, when an animal’s food comes back out of its mouth before it has reached the stomach, and vomiting, in which an animal’s food has reached the stomach, then is expelled back out. So, if an animal is experiencing dysphagia, what comes out of its mouth will look very similar to the food it was just eating, as it has not experienced any kind of digestion. If an animal is regurgitating, the food will look more chewed and mushy, and they will appear to have slight effort getting the food up and out. If an animal is vomiting, their food will look like it has started the process of digestion, and they will have a lot of full body effort to get the food up and out.

Dysphagia can be caused by nerve issues, rabies, bad dental health, or a foreign body, which is when there is something stuck in the animal’s throat that they should not have eaten, like a toy.

When an animal is unable to swallow, this means that they are not able to consume any of the food they are attempting to eat. So, their body is not receiving any of the nutrients it needs and any of the nutrients that the food is providing.

Activities

 

Common misconceptions and challenge points

A potential challenge for students could be understanding the complexity of dysphagia and how different causes (nerve damage, rabies, dental issues, and foreign bodies) can lead to similar symptoms like drooling and difficulty swallowing. Since dysphagia is a relatively complex medical term, students might struggle with distinguishing between these causes, especially without direct observation of a cat or animal in distress. To address this, you can emphasize key differences in symptoms during the clue phase (e.g., rabies might show aggression, while a foreign body would cause drooling or gagging). Additionally, you can simplify the explanation of how nerve damage affects swallowing by describing it in terms of “signals” not getting to the muscles needed to swallow or how dental issues are directly related to pain while chewing.

Assessment

The assessment is a short, 4 question quiz using a variety of question types to test learner’s understanding of the topics covered throughout this lesson.

Further exploration

Other chapters within this book may be interesting and beneficial to learners, those may be found below:

Whiskers’s Swallowing Struggles: A Journey to a Purrfect Diagnosis

On the Look Out for Dysphagia

Jacob and Jeffrey’s Journey of Dysphagia

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Lesson plans for GI physiology topics Copyright © 2023 by Erin Malone is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.