Pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder)
Pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder) occurs when a child has difficulty swallowing food or liquids. This can occur in any phase of the swallowing process.
What is pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder)?
A child with dysphagia may have trouble swallowing food or liquids, including saliva. The child may also experience pain while swallowing. It is difficult for a child with a swallowing disorder to get the correct amount of nutrients into their body, which can affect the child’s ability to grow and gain weight.
It takes about 50 pairs of muscles and six cranial nerves working together for human beings to swallow. If anything goes wrong anywhere in the process, it may cause a disorder known as dysphagia.
Swallowing and feeding disorders are common in children. It's estimated between 25% and 45% of normally developing children have some form of the condition.

What are the phases of pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder)?
Swallowing has four phases. The first two phases are voluntary, while phases three and four occur involuntarily in a child’s body. A child has dysphagia when one or more of these phases fail to occur properly:
Oral preparation phase is when food and liquid are prepared in the mouth for swallowing (chewing).
Oral phase is when the tongue starts the swallowing response by pushing the food and liquid to the back of the mouth.
Pharyngeal phase is when food and liquid are passed through the pharynx (throat) and into the esophagus (swallowing tube).
Esophageal phase is when food and liquid goes from the esophagus into the stomach.
What are the signs and symptoms of pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder)?
While symptoms of dysphagia vary by child, in general, the main symptom is a child’s inability to swallow correctly while eating or drinking.
Symptoms in infants (birth to 1 year) and toddlers (1-3 years old)
Arching back
Choking
Difficulty breathing while eating
Excessive crying
Vomiting (more than spit-up)
Weight loss/lack of weight gain
Symptoms in children older than 3 years
Coughing
Choking
Difficulty breathing while eating
Drooling
Eating slowly
Feeling like there is food stuck in throat
Weight loss/lack of weight gain
Voice sounds different
What are the causes of pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder)?
There are a variety of illnesses, diseases and congenital (present from birth) defects that can cause dysphagia in a child.
A few of the most common include:
GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
How is pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder) treated?
Treatments can range from behavioral therapy and medications to surgery. Your speech-language pathologist (SLP) will work with you and other specialists to determine the treatment plan that is right for your child.
Pediatric dysphagia (swallowing disorder) doctors and providers
Bradley Barth, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Michele Alkalay, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Amal Aqul, MDPediatric Hepatologist
Sarah Barlow, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Nandini Channabasappa, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Steven Copenhaver, MDPediatric Pulmonologist
Aakash Goyal, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Bhaskar Gurram, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Romaine Johnson, MDPediatric Otolaryngologist (ENT)
Lauren Lazar, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Megha Mehta, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Derek Ngai, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Charina Ramirez, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Norberto Rodriguez-Baez, MDPediatric Hepatologist
Isabel Rojas Santamaria, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Pravin Sah, MDPediatric Pulmonologist
Rinarani Sanghavi, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Meghana Sathe, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Peter Schochet, MDPediatric Pulmonologist
Mhammad Gaith Semrin, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Luis Sifuentes-Dominguez, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
David Troendle, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Stephen Chorney, MDPediatric Otolaryngologist (ENT)
Felicity Lenes-Voit, MDPediatric Otolaryngologist (ENT)
Kimberly Donner, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Otolaryngology
Phuong Luu, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Gastroenterology
Jennifer Moylon, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Otolaryngology
Emily Roman, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Otolaryngology
Katherine Turner, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Otolaryngology
Carol Watson, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Otolaryngology
Cheryl Holihan, APRN, PNP-AC/PCNurse Practitioner - Otolaryngology
Jennie Jones, APRN, PNP-AC/PCNurse Practitioner - Otolaryngology
Caroline Martin, APRN, PNP-AC/PCNurse Practitioner - Otolaryngology
Margaret McCasland, APRN, PNP-AC/PCNurse Practitioner - Otolaryngology
Van Nguyen, APRN, PNP-PCNurse Practitioner - Gastroenterology
Jennifer Peacock, APRN, PNP-PCNurse Practitioner - Gastroenterology
Shabina Walji-Virani, APRN, PNP-PCNurse Practitioner - Gastroenterology
Christine Winser-Bean, APRN, FNPNurse Practitioner - Gastroenterology