Dysphagia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of an Swallowing and Oral Care Program on Swallowing and Oral Intake Status in Patients Following Prolonged Endotracheal Intubation
Verified date | April 2016 |
Source | National Taiwan University Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This pre-and post-intervention study enrolled adult Intensive Care Unit(ICU) patients (≥50
years) successfully extubated after ≥48 hours endotracheal intubation and without preexisting
neuromuscular disease or swallowing dysfunction.
All participants received by a trained nurse-administered, hospital-based (up to 14 days)
Swallowing and Oral Care(SOC) intervention comprising toothbrushing/salivary gland massage,
oral motor exercise, and advice on safe-swallowing strategies.
All participants' daily intake status (21 days) and oral health status, oral
sensation(stereognosis, light touch and two-point discrimination), tongue and lip strength,
salivary secretion, body weight) were assessed at 2, 7, 14 days post-extubation by a blinded
research nurse.
Feasibility was evaluated as time spent providing SOC, patients adherence to SOC components,
and adverse event(i.e., coughing, wet voice, or decreased oxygen saturation) during SOC
intervention.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 63 |
Est. completion date | December 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 50 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion criteria - Adult patients (50 years old and older) - People who had been extubated for over 48 hours and successfully extubated - People or their legal representative who agree to participate in this study and sign the permit - People who can communicate with Mandarin or Taiwanese Exclusion criteria - People who have diagnosis of neurological diseases such as cerebrovascular disease, Parkinson's disease or spinal injury, etc. - People who have abnormal structure or function of oropharynx such as patients with head neck cancer or acquired/ inherited abnormal oropharynx structure - People who currently have endotracheostomy - People who are unconscious or have mental disability, having difficulty following the protocol or interacting with others - People who are absolute quarantined. such as patients with open tuberculosis - People who had swallowing difficulties before current intubation |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Taiwan | National Taiwan University Hospital | Taipei |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
National Taiwan University Hospital |
Taiwan,
Affoo RH, Trottier K, Garrick R, Mascarenhas T, Jang Y, Martin RE. The Effects of Tooth Brushing on Whole Salivary Flow Rate in Older Adults. Biomed Res Int. 2018 Feb 26;2018:3904139. doi: 10.1155/2018/3904139. eCollection 2018. — View Citation
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Chen CC, Wu KH, Ku SC, Chan DC, Lee JJ, Wang TG, Hsiao TY. Bedside screen for oral cavity structure, salivary flow, and vocal production over the 14days following endotracheal extubation. J Crit Care. 2018 Jun;45:1-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jcrc.2017.11.035. Epub 2017 Dec 16. — View Citation
Crary MA, Mann GD, Groher ME. Initial psychometric assessment of a functional oral intake scale for dysphagia in stroke patients. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2005 Aug;86(8):1516-20. — View Citation
El Solh A, Okada M, Bhat A, Pietrantoni C. Swallowing disorders post orotracheal intubation in the elderly. Intensive Care Med. 2003 Sep;29(9):1451-5. Epub 2003 Aug 2. — View Citation
Heffner JE. Swallowing complications after endotracheal extubation: moving from "whether" to "how". Chest. 2010 Mar;137(3):509-10. doi: 10.1378/chest.09-2477. — View Citation
Kim MJ, Park YH, Park YS, Song YH. Associations Between Prolonged Intubation and Developing Post-extubation Dysphagia and Aspiration Pneumonia in Non-neurologic Critically Ill Patients. Ann Rehabil Med. 2015 Oct;39(5):763-71. doi: 10.5535/arm.2015.39.5.763. Epub 2015 Oct 26. — View Citation
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Macht M, King CJ, Wimbish T, Clark BJ, Benson AB, Burnham EL, Williams A, Moss M. Post-extubation dysphagia is associated with longer hospitalization in survivors of critical illness with neurologic impairment. Crit Care. 2013 Jun 20;17(3):R119. doi: 10.1186/cc12791. — View Citation
Macht M, Wimbish T, Clark BJ, Benson AB, Burnham EL, Williams A, Moss M. Postextubation dysphagia is persistent and associated with poor outcomes in survivors of critical illness. Crit Care. 2011;15(5):R231. doi: 10.1186/cc10472. Epub 2011 Sep 29. — View Citation
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* Note: There are 17 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Days to reach Oral intake status level 6 | Using the "Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS)", a validated tool with established validity (81%-98%) and inter-rater reliabilities (0.86 to 0.91). The scale ranges from levels 1 to 7, level 1=Nothing by mouth; level 2=Tube dependent with minimal attempts of food or liquid; level 3=Tube dependent with consistent oral intake of food or liquid; level 4=Total oral diet of a single consistency; level 5=Total oral diet with multiple consistencies, but requiring special preparation or compensations; level 6=Total oral diet with multiple consistencies with special preparation, but with specific food limitations; level 7=Total oral diet with no restrictions. | 21 days post-extubation | |
Primary | whether return to total oral intake within 21 days post extubation | Using the "Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS)", a validated tool with established validity (81%-98%) and inter-rater reliabilities (0.86 to 0.91). The scale ranges from levels 1 to 7, level 1=Nothing by mouth; level 2=Tube dependent with minimal attempts of food or liquid; level 3=Tube dependent with consistent oral intake of food or liquid; level 4=Total oral diet of a single consistency; level 5=Total oral diet with multiple consistencies, but requiring special preparation or compensations; level 6=Total oral diet with multiple consistencies with special preparation, but with specific food limitations; level 7=Total oral diet with no restrictions. | 21 days post-extubation | |
Primary | pass or fail Three-Step Swallowing Screen at 7th day post-extubation | Evaluation by using Three-Step Swallowing Screen(3-SSS). Participants were first assessed for prior history of dysphagia/feeding-tube dependence and signs of consciousness change, poor oxygen saturation (i.e., SaO2<90%; oxygen-mask dependence; reintubation), obvious drooling, or frequent choking on saliva. If negative, participants were then asked to swallow 3mL of water. If laryngeal elevation was identified with no signs of choking or wet voice, participants were asked to swallow 50mL of water; those without any signs of choking, wet voice, or slow swallowing were considered to pass the 3-SSS. | on 7th day post-extubation | |
Primary | pass or fail Three-Step Swallowing Screen at 14th day post-extubation | Evaluation by using Three-Step Swallowing Screen(3-SSS). Participants were first assessed for prior history of dysphagia/feeding-tube dependence and signs of consciousness change, poor oxygen saturation (i.e., SaO2<90%; oxygen-mask dependence; reintubation), obvious drooling, or frequent choking on saliva. If negative, participants were then asked to swallow 3mL of water. If laryngeal elevation was identified with no signs of choking or wet voice, participants were asked to swallow 50mL of water; those without any signs of choking, wet voice, or slow swallowing were considered to pass the 3-SSS. | on 14th day post-extubation | |
Primary | pass or fail Three-Step Swallowing Screen at 21st day post-extubation | Evaluation by using Three-Step Swallowing Screen(3-SSS). Participants were first assessed for prior history of dysphagia/feeding-tube dependence and signs of consciousness change, poor oxygen saturation (i.e., SaO2<90%; oxygen-mask dependence; reintubation), obvious drooling, or frequent choking on saliva. If negative, participants were then asked to swallow 3mL of water. If laryngeal elevation was identified with no signs of choking or wet voice, participants were asked to swallow 50mL of water; those without any signs of choking, wet voice, or slow swallowing were considered to pass the 3-SSS. | on 21st day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Oral health status | The oral health status evaluated by Oral Assessment Guide(OAG), a validated tool with established validity and inter-rater reliabilities. The scores was coded as "1=no change", "2=moderate change", "3= severe change" of eight categories (voice, ability to swallow, lips, saliva, tongue, mucous membrane, gingiva, teeth). All scores are summed, ranges from 3 to 24. | on the 2nd, 7th and 14th day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Oral stereognosis | Oral stereognosis was measured by a set of five standardized researcher-made acrylic resin shapes (round, square, star, oval, and triangular), as suggested. Participants were given 30 s to visually inspect the test pieces along with the diagram of corresponding shapes before testing began.The variable are depicted in term of percentage of participants answered correct shape of each test piece (ranges 0~100%). | on the 2nd, 7th and 14th day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Oral light-touch sensation | Oral light touch sensation was measured with Semmes-Weinstein monofilaments. A standardized set of 5 monofilaments with values from 1.65 to 3.22 (log force) was used. | on the 2nd, 7th and 14th day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Oral two-point discrimination | The stereognostic ability of the tongue was tested using the MacKinnon-Dellon Disk-criminator. The variable are depicted in term of distance in millimeter (mm) when two-point sensation was perceived by participants. | on the 2nd, 7th and 14th day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Tongue and lip strength | The tongue and lip strength assessed using the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI System; IOPI Medical LLC, Carnation, WA, USA). | on the 2nd, 7th, and 14th day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Salivary secretion | Record salivary secretion using Modified Schirmer's test. With participants sitting upright, research nurses held a standardized 1-cm wide by 17-cm long Schirmer tear test strip vertically, with the rounded end of the strip placed at the floor of their mouth. At the end of 5 minutes, a wetting length in centimeter (cm) was recorded. | on the 2nd, 7th, and 14th day post-extubation | |
Secondary | Body weight | Body weight | on the 2nd, 7th, 14th and 21th day post-extubation. |
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