| Literature DB >> 27785002 |
Laura Wj Baijens1, Pere Clavé2, Patrick Cras3, Olle Ekberg4, Alexandre Forster5, Gerald F Kolb6, Jean-Claude Leners7, Stefano Masiero8, Jesús Mateos-Nozal9, Omar Ortega2, David G Smithard10, Renée Speyer11, Margaret Walshe12.
Abstract
This position document has been developed by the Dysphagia Working Group, a committee of members from the European Society for Swallowing Disorders and the European Union Geriatric Medicine Society, and invited experts. It consists of 12 sections that cover all aspects of clinical management of oropharyngeal dysphagia (OD) related to geriatric medicine and discusses prevalence, quality of life, and legal and ethical issues, as well as health economics and social burden. OD constitutes impaired or uncomfortable transit of food or liquids from the oral cavity to the esophagus, and it is included in the World Health Organization's classification of diseases. It can cause severe complications such as malnutrition, dehydration, respiratory infections, aspiration pneumonia, and increased readmissions, institutionalization, and morbimortality. OD is a prevalent and serious problem among all phenotypes of older patients as oropharyngeal swallow response is impaired in older people and can cause aspiration. Despite its prevalence and severity, OD is still underdiagnosed and untreated in many medical centers. There are several validated clinical and instrumental methods (videofluoroscopy and fiberoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing) to diagnose OD, and treatment is mainly based on compensatory measures, although new treatments to stimulate the oropharyngeal swallow response are under research. OD matches the definition of a geriatric syndrome as it is highly prevalent among older people, is caused by multiple factors, is associated with several comorbidities and poor prognosis, and needs a multidimensional approach to be treated. OD should be given more importance and attention and thus be included in all standard screening protocols, treated, and regularly monitored to prevent its main complications. More research is needed to develop and standardize new treatments and management protocols for older patients with OD, which is a challenging mission for our societies.Entities:
Keywords: Swallowing disorders; aged; frail elderly; healthy aging; malnutrition; quality of life; sarcopenia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27785002 PMCID: PMC5063605 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S107750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Prevalence of dysphagia in different phenotypes of patients or diseases
| Phenotype | Target population | Evaluation method | Prevalence | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Older patients | Independently living older people | Screening (questionnaires) | 11.4%–33.7% | Holland et al |
| Roy et al | ||||
| Bloem et al | ||||
| Kawashima et al | ||||
| Yang et al | ||||
| Barczi and Robbins | ||||
| Clinical exploration (V-VST) | 23% | Serra-Prat et al | ||
| Hospitalized AGU | Not specified/water swallow test/V-VST | 29.4%–47% | Lee et al | |
| Hospitalized with CAP | Water swallow test/V-VST | 55%–91.7% | Cabre et al | |
| Almirall et al | ||||
| Hospitalized with CAP | Instrumental exploration | 75% | Almirall et al | |
| Institutionalized | Screening (questionnaires) | 40% | Nogueira and Reis | |
| Water swallow test | 38% | |||
| Screening + clinical exploration | 51% | Lin et al | ||
| NDDs | Parkinson’s disease | Reported by patients | 35% | Kalf et al |
| Objective exploration | 82% | |||
| Alzheimer’s disease | Instrumental exploration | 57%–84% | Langmore et al | |
| Horner et al | ||||
| Dementia | Reported by caregivers | 19%–30% | Langmore et al | |
| Ikeda et al | ||||
| Instrumental exploration | 57%–84% | Suh et al | ||
| Langmore et al | ||||
| Horner et al | ||||
| Multiple sclerosis | Screening (questionnaires) | 24% | De Pauw et al | |
| Instrumental exploration | 34.3% | Calcagno et al | ||
| ALS | Clinical and instrumental explorations | 47%–86% | Chen and Garrett | |
| Stroke | Acute phase | Screening (questionnaires) | 37%–45% | Martino et al |
| Clinical exploration | 51%–55% | |||
| Instrumental exploration | 64%–78% | |||
| Chronic phase | Clinical exploration | 25%–45% | ||
| Instrumental exploration | 40%–81% |
Note: Copyright © 2015. Nature Reviews. Adapted from Clave P, Shaker R. Dysphagia: current reality and scope of the problem. Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2015; 12(5):259–270.56
Abbreviations: V-VST, volume-viscosity swallowing test; AGU, acute geriatric unit; CAP, community-acquired pneumonia; NDDs, neurodegenerative diseases; ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.