View clinical trials related to Dysphagia.
Filter by:This study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of the McNeill Dysphagia Therapy (MDTP) programme combined with Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) in individuals with post-stroke dysphagia.
This was a randomized controlled study. The infants enrolled were randomly divided into the IOE group (with Intermittent Oro-Esophageal Tube Feeding, n=25) and the PNG group (with Nasogastric Tube Feeding, n=23), all receiving systemic therapy. Before and after 4-week treatment, pulmonary infection, swallowing function, nutritional status and body weight between the two group were compared.
A prospective study was conducted on 84 CSVD patients with dysphagia and cognitive impairment. They were divided into the comparison group and observation group evenly. All the patients were provided with routine therapy, while the patients in the observation group were given SGB. The swallowing function, cognitive function and activities of daily living of the two groups of patients before and after treatment were evaluated by Penetration-Aspiration Scale, Mini-mental state examination and modified Barthel index.
With 98 swallow screening tools already developed, dysphagia remains under-screened and undiagnosed. Even for patients at high risk of oropharyngeal dysphagia (i.e., hospitalized aged, post-stroke, Parkinson's disease, head and neck cancer, or those had ≥ 48 hours of endotracheal intubation), swallow screening is not systematically performed. Nurses, as front-line providers, are bombarded with patients' dysphagia. We witnessed patients' subsequent poor outcomes, including delayed oral intake, dependence on the feeding tube, increased pneumonia, prolonged hospital length of stay, and increased in-hospital. Despite many calls for nurses to perform bedside screens for timely management, there is a lack of census on what tools to use (98 available, many claimed to be valid) and whether nurses are capable of safely performing these screens, especially when facing across-disease patients. Without a screening tool that is used universally across different diseases to assess whether patients can safely engage in oral intake, clinical healthcare professionals will face significant challenges in conducting the screening. Meanwhile, we found the common, shared items, i.e., consciousness, voice/speech, coughing, oral motor movements, and water drinking tests or swallowing trials, are included in most swallow screening tools, suggesting these items are essential basics for oral intake safely. Therefore, instead of creating a new screening tool, the aim of this study is to extract the common, shared items among existing swallowing screening tools and assemble them into a swallow screening protocol that can be administered by nursing staff for triage whether inpatient populations are at risk of unsafe for oral intake. After conducting a systematic review and assessing the quality, we found the Yale Swallow Protocol was identified as a high-quality swallowing screening tool and was used for screening the risk of aspiration across diverse outpatients who were referred for further swallow assessment. However, whether the Yale Swallow Protocol can be implemented in acute care settings to screen for "oral intake" requires further warranted for its applicability. Therefore, this study aims to test the applicability (i.e., accuracy, responsiveness, time-spending, and safety) of the Yale Swallow Protocol when used to screen for 'oral intake,' with speech therapists' evaluations serving as the reference standard for inpatients across various disease categories.
Swallowing disorder, or dysphagia, is a lack of protection of the airways during the passage of the food bolus towards the esophagus. Swallowing disorder is characterized by a feeling of discomfort when swallowing, difficult swallowing in elderly people or a blockage felt during the progression of food between the mouth and the stomach, sometimes with falsities. These disorders can be the cause of a loss of appetite and a reduction in food consumption in older people. In the most serious cases, they can lead to aspiration, weakening the pulmonary passages and possibly leading to suffocation. Swallowing disorders constitute an important public health problem due to their prevalence among the elderly. Many early readmissions could be avoided thanks to better quality of care in these patients. In the elderly, the number of comorbidities and the multiplicity of medications and drug intake increase the incidence of swallowing disorders in this population. They constitute a common pathology, probably underestimated and underdiagnosed in the geriatric population. Given the aging of the Martinique population, it is appropriate to offer an easy-to-use, quickly achievable tool for diagnostic purposes, making it possible to quickly identify potential swallowing disorders, and therefore to anticipate meal intake, and on the adaptation of the prescription to a medicinal alternative (before any food or medication taken during hospitalization). In the Geriatric Short-Stay Unit of the Martinique University Hospital, a tool called "Deglut'G", was developed, and has been used since 2015, in order to allow caregivers a rapid, reliable and relevant assessment of swallowing disorders in the elderly, in order to guide care and medication alternatives.It now appears important to validate this tool, by comparing it with the results of examinations of swallowing disorders obtained from a speech-language pathologists (SLPs) and an ENT doctor.
This study aims to investigate the correlation between COVID-19 and dysphagia in adults. The population of the study consisted of those who applied to Bezmialem University, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Dysphagia Outpatient Clinic with the complaint of dysphagia. Patients older than 18 years of age, suffering from dysphagia and not having mental retardation were included in the study. Patients who did not have swallowing difficulties and refused to participate in the study were excluded.
BACKGROUND: Dysphagia is one of the most life-threatening stroke complications. Dysphagic stroke patients are at increased risk of aspiration pneumonia. Pneumonia accounts for at least 10% of post stroke deaths within 30 days of hospitalization after stroke. rTMS is effective in improving post-stroke dysphagia and swallowing coordination after stimulation of the unaffected hemisphere, however it's efficacy on the prevalence of pneumonia has not yet been examined. Purpose of the study: To determine the effect of adding repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation to conventional oropharyngeal physical therapy program on the prevalence of aspiration pneumonia in in patients with post stroke dysphagia.
The study aims to adapt the Mealtime Assessment Scale (MAS) in a pediatric population in order to provide an observational tool compiled by swallowing professionals, in Italian, for the assessment of swallowing efficacy and safety during mealtime in an ecological setting, as mealtime administration occurs independently or by the caregiver.
The primary outcome of this study is dysphagia (difficulty swallowing) on postoperative speech and swallow evaluation following lung transplantation. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) (creates pictures of the heart from inside the participants body) is routinely performed for all lung transplantations at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and it is the standard of care. Patients are randomized to two groups. The intervention group would limit the number of TEE clips (# pictures taken) per case. The control group would leave the number of TEE clips to the discretion of the attending anesthesiologist. The investigators hypothesize that reduction in TEE imaging during lung transplantation will reduce dysphagia.
Swallowing impairments (dysphagia) frequently occur after stroke and have devastating consequences on overall health and quality of life, and long-term deficits in swallow function also increase risk of morbidity (e.g. depression) and mortality (i.e. aspiration pneumonia). As such, rehabilitation of swallow function to improve safety and efficiency of swallowing is essential in this population. This study aims to: 1) Provide preliminary data to evaluate the effect of a novel lingual endurance exercise on swallow function in individuals with post-stroke dysphagia; and 2) Collect preliminary data regarding changes in white matter tract diffusion and cortical thickness and from MRI data to better understand effects of lingual exercise training on neuroplasticity.