Management of the Patient with Dysphagia Flashcards

1
Q

Clinical Questions To Think Of Prior to Therapy

A
  • What type of nutritional management is necessary?
  • Should Tx be initiate and what type?: Compensatory, Exercises, Direct, Indirect
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2
Q

Clinical Questions to Think of During Therapy

A

Does the patient require a maintenance program to maintain the gains in therapy or slow deterioration?

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3
Q

Main Goal for any dysphagia treatment plan

A

Re-establishment of oral feeding while constantly maintaining proper hydration, nutrition, and safe swallowing

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4
Q

Diagnosis- Primary factor in deciding whether to initiate therapy

A

Knowledge of the speed and potential of the patient’s swallowing disorder

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5
Q

Diagnosis- Therapy Considerations

A
  • Compensatory strategies may only be necessary if a patient is likely to recover quickly (i.e., stroke without other medical complications – recovery may be within 1-2 weeks)
  • Effortful swallows and active exercise may be inappropriate for patients that have motor neuron disease secondary to fatigue (i.e., Myasthenia Gravis- clients fatigue over time because of constant muscle activity)
  • Dementia patients may not be a candidate for therapy as they are unable to follow directions
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6
Q

Prognosis- Sudden onset neurological damage

A
  • stroke
  • head injury
  • spinal cord injury
  • structural damage (surgical, radiation therapy from head and neck cancer, gun shot wound, other trauma)

Tx is appropriate as there is potential for partial or full recovery of PO intake

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7
Q

Prognosis- Progressive degenerative disease

A
  • Parkinson’s
  • Motor neuron disease
  • Myasthenia Gravis
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Various types of muscular dystrophy
  • Alzheimer’s disease

Tx may not be appropriate because of eventual loss of motor control or cognitive abilities to ensure safe swallowing via compensatory strategies or active treatment

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8
Q

Compensatory Strategies

A

If compensatory strategies alone are successful in eliminating the symptoms of dysphagia (aspiration, residual material): swallowing therapy may not be warranted

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9
Q

Severity of Dysphagia

A

If compensatory strategies alone are unsuccessful: swallowing therapy may warrant a variety of exercises to improve the range and coordination of the oral and oropharyngeal movements necessary without giving solid/liquid (pre-feeding therapy)

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10
Q

Following directions

A
  • Determine if Pt can follow simple and complex directions
  • Swallowing maneuvers are complex
  • Compensatory strategies rely more on caregiver
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11
Q

Respiratory function

A

-Normal swallowing requirements:
0.3 to 0.6 seconds for sip of liquids
3 to 5 seconds for continuous cup drinking

  • Supraglottic and Super-Supraglottic swallows require modification of airway closure duration
  • Effortful swallow and Mendelsohn maneuver affect duration of airway closure
  • If respiratory function is severely affected Tx may be postponed until proper functioning is restored
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12
Q

Caregiver Support

A

Necessary for some to ensure:

  • regular Tx practice
  • compensatory strategy reminders
  • proper feeding
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13
Q

Compensatory Treatment Procedures

A

Usually introduced during Dx procedure

  • Control the flow of food and eliminate the patient’s symptoms (aspiration)
  • Don’t always change the swallow physiology
  • Largely under the control of the caregiver or clinician and can be used with patients of all ages and cognitive levels
  • Less muscle effort or work for the patient
  • Do not fatigue the patient as quickly as swallowing exercises
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14
Q

Compensatory Treatment- Postural Techniques

A
  • Chin-Down (chin tuck)
  • Chin-Up
  • Chin-Down and head rotation
  • Head Tilt
  • Lying Down
  • To improve sensory awareness: thermal-tactile, exaggerated suck-swallow,
  • Modifying volume and speed of food presentation
  • Diet changes (food consistencies)
  • Intra-oral prosthetics
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15
Q

Chin-Down (chin-tuck)

A
  • Touch chin to neck
  • Pushes anterior pharyngeal wall posteriorly
  • Tongue base and epiglottis pushed close to pharyngeal wall
  • Narrows airway entrance

Used for:

  • Delayed triggering of pharyngeal swallow
  • Reduced tongue base retraction
  • Reduced airway closure
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16
Q

Chin-Up

A
  • Drains food from oral cavity via gravity

Used for:

  • Pt with reduced lingual control (weakening, amputated, paresis)
  • If concerned with airway closure: supraglottic swallow maneuver is used to close the vocal folds
17
Q

Chin-Down and head rotation

A
  • Good for airway protection

Used for:
- Pt with weakness on one side

18
Q

Head Tilt

A
  • Tilt head to better/stronger side
  • Gravity drains food to side with better control

Used for:
- Unilateral oral impairment and unilateral pharyngeal impairment on same side

19
Q

Lying Down

A
  • Use gravity to drain residual food on pharyngeal wall as opposed to sitting up where it would go to airway
  • Only can use straw to drink with sucking rather than inhalation
  • Should NOT be used with successive swallows if there is food buildup in pharynx
  • More elevation (15-30degrees) for those with GERD
  • Clear residue before sitting up

Used for:
- Pt without oral movement

20
Q

To Improve Sensory Awareness

A

Used for:

  • Pt with swallow apraxia
  • Tactile agnosia (can’t feel food)
  • Delayed onset of oral swallow
  • Reduced oral sensation
  • Delayed trigger of pharyngeal swallow

Includes:

  • Increasing downward pressure of the spoon against the tongue when presenting food
  • Sour bolus
  • Cold bolus
  • Bolus that requires chewing
  • Larger volume bolus
  • Thermal stimulation
21
Q

To Improve Sensory Awareness

A

Both therapeutic and compensatory:
- Compensatory because they are under the control of the caregiver/clinician and do not change the motor control of the swallow

  • Therapeutic because they change the timing of the swallow by reducing both the oral onset time and pharyngeal delay time
22
Q

Sensory Awareness- Thermal-tactile stimulation

A
  • Vertically rub anterior faucial arches firmly 4-5x
  • Use 00 laryngeal mirror
  • Heightens oral awareness and alerts brainstem and cortex- will trigger pharyngeal swallow when oral stage begins
23
Q

Sensory Awareness- Exaggerated Suck-Swallow

A
  • Increase vertical tongue-jaw sucking with lips closed
  • Facilitates pharyngeal swallow triggering
  • Draws saliva to back of the mouth

Used for:
- Pt with poor saliva control

24
Q

Modifying Volume and Speed of Food Presentation

A
  • Build-up of food can result in collection and potential for penetration/aspiration
  • Take smaller boluses as slower rate to eliminate risk for aspiration

Used for:

  • Pt with weak pharyngeal swallow
  • Requiring 2-3 swallows per bolus
25
Q

Diet Changes (Consistency changes)

A
  • The last compensatory strategy
  • Should only be done with other strategies or therapies are unsuccessful
  • Can be difficult for Pt to accept

Used for:

  • Pt with constant postural changes or movement disorders
  • Pts who cannot follow directions and use maneuvers
  • Pts where oral-sensory procedures are inappropriate
26
Q

Intraoral Prosthetics

A

Can assist oral cancer Pts with:

  • 25% or more oral tongue tissue removed
  • Poor tongue movement
  • Neurological Pts with bilateral hypoglossus paralysis
  • Pts with velopharyngeal difficulties
  • Cleft palates
27
Q

Types of Intraoral Posthetics

A

Palatal Lift: lifts soft palate to closed position
used for patients with velar paralysis

Palatal Obturator: closes a hole in the palate
used for patients with cleft palate and significant soft palate resections (cut outs)

Palatal Augmentation or Reshaping Prosthesis: recontours hard palate to meet tongue to make A-P bolus transport more efficient
used for patients with tongue resections or bilateral tongue paralysis