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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Not yet recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05982977
Other study ID # 2022J01880
Secondary ID
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date September 30, 2023
Est. completion date August 1, 2025

Study information

Verified date August 2023
Source Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Contact Qingqing Zhang
Phone 18150019719
Email 2017013@fjtcm.edu.cn
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Up to 84% of patients after stroke are accompanied by dysphagia, of which 53% are oral dysphagia. The oral phase is the initial phase of swallowing activity and the only stage of swallowing that is completely discretionary. Swallowing activity in the oral stage is not only related to the formation and push of food pellets, but also affects the continuity between the transition from spontaneous swallowing to the swallowing reflex.


Description:

After stroke, patients are prone to oral dysphagia, poor control of food masses and liquids in the mouth, resulting in food spillover, residual and premature overflow, resulting in dehydration, malnutrition, aspiration, pneumonia and other serious consequences, which greatly reduce the eating safety and quality of life of patients after stroke. Therefore, the rehabilitation of oral swallowing function is a way for patients with swallowing disorder after stroke to return to society and improve their quality of life. Previous studies have found that acupuncture is an effective intervention to improve swallowing disorder in oral stage after stroke. Whether acupuncture promotes the improvement of swallowing function in oral stage by regulating the synergic activity of cortical swallowing network and muscle group has not been fully clarified.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Not yet recruiting
Enrollment 56
Est. completion date August 1, 2025
Est. primary completion date August 1, 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 40 Years to 75 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Patients meeting the diagnostic criteria for acute ischemic stroke established by the Neurology Society of the Chinese Medical Association and confirmed by craniocerebral CT or MRI; 2. Oral dysphagia caused by stroke; 3. Currently diet is restricted, FOIS score is 5 or less; WST score 3 or above; 4. MoCA score of 21 or above, able to understand and follow simple instructions from the treatment staff, able to cooperate and willing to undergo examination and treatment; 5. 40 to 75 years old; 6. Conscious and stable vital signs; 7. Convalescent patients with stroke course and dysphagia duration between 1-6 months; 8. Voluntary participation and informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Patients with dysphagia not caused by stroke or non-stroke oral dysphagia; 2. Previous history of stroke or dysphagia; 3. Patients with serious primary diseases or mental disorders of other systems; 4. Suffering from various bleeding prone diseases; 5. Severe needle fainting; 6. People with metal implants. 7. Patients with poor compliance are not treated as prescribed

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Acupuncture
The patient was placed in a supine position, selected Lianquan, Fengchi, and acupoints.
Behavioral:
Conventional rehabilitation
swallowing training included breathing training, masticatory muscle training, oral movement training and feeding training.

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Qingqing Zhang Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Oral functional score To assess participants' oral swallowing function 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
Secondary Surface electromyography To assess the swallowing muscle activity 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
Secondary Water swallowing test (WST) The severity of dysphagia was assessed by the WST. Level 1: Can drink 30ml water successfully within 5 seconds; Level 2: Drink water more than 2 times, can swallow without choking. Level 3: Can be drunk once, but cough. Level 4: swallowed more than twice, but with choking. Level 5: Frequent choking, unable to swallow all. Normal: Level 1, Suspicious: Level 1, more than 5 seconds or level 2; Abnormal: Level 3 to 5 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
Secondary Standardized Swallowing Assessment (SSA) To assess the severity of swallowing. The lowest score on this scale is 18 points, the highest score is 46 points, the higher the score, the worse the swallowing function. 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
Secondary Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS) To assess the condition of swallowing. The grade of FOIS was categorized as level 1 to 3 (poor FOIS: tube feeding), levels 4 and 5 (moderate FOIS: total oral diet requiring special preparation) or levels 6 and 7 (good FOIS: total oral diet without special preparation). 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
Secondary Teacher salivation rating (TDS) Assess salivation. Level 1: No salivation; Level 2: Small amount, occasional flow. Level 3: Stream from time to time; Level 4: Flow frequently, but not linearly; Level 5: Flow in line, chest often wet 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
Secondary Swallowing Related Daily Quality of Life Scale (SWAL-QOL) Assessed patients' quality of life. The SWAL-QOL scale consists of 11 dimensions, covering 44 items, of which 10 dimensions measure patients' quality of life and one dimension measures patients' swallowing symptoms. The 10 quality of life dimensions included 30 items, of which 8 (25 items in total) were related to swallowing, including psychological burden, eating time, appetite, food choice, verbal communication, fear of eating, mental health, and social interaction: the common dimension had 2 (5 items in total), including fatigue and sleep. The dimension of swallowing symptoms included 14 items. The SWAL-OOL scale was scored by Likert scoring method. The higher the score of five levels (1-5 respectively), the better the quality of life. 4 weeks (Before and after intervation)
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