| Literature DB >> 33687558 |
Ebru Umay1, Sibel Eyigor2, Cumhur Ertekin3, Zeliha Unlu4, Barin Selcuk5, Gulistan Bahat6, Ali Yavuz Karahan7, Yaprak Secil8, Eda Gurcay9, Nefati Kıylioglu10, Betul Yavuz Keles11, Esra Giray12, Canan Tikiz4, Ilknur Albayrak Gezer13, Ayse Yalıman14, Ekin Ilke Sen14, Meltem Vural15, Guleser Saylam16, Mazlum Serdar Akaltun17, Aylin Sari18, Sibel Alicura16, Fatih Karaahmet19, Murat Inanir20, Aylin Demirhan21, Banu Aydeniz15, Meral Bilgilisoy22, Arif Yuksel23, Zeynep Alev Ozcete21, Yalkın Calik24, Ebru Alemdaroglu25, Dilek Keskin26, Sevnaz Sahin27, Mehmet Fevzi Oztekin28, Baha Sezgin29, Ozgur Karaahmet30, Serkan Bengisu31, Tanu Yalcin Gokler32, Serdar Mercimekci32.
Abstract
Dysphagia is one of the most common and important complications of stroke. It is an independent marker of poor outcome after acute stroke and may become chronic after the acute period and continues to affect all aspects of the patient's life. Patients with stroke may encounter any of the medical branches in the emergency room or outpatient clinic, and as in our country, there may not be specialists specific for dysphagia, such as speech-language pathologists (SLP), in every hospital. This study aimed to raise awareness and create a common opinion of medical specialists for stroke patients with dysphagia. This recommendation paper has been written by a multidisciplinary team and offers 45 recommendations for stroke patients with dysphagia. It was created using the eight-step Delphi round via e-mail. This study is mostly specific to Turkey. However, since it contains detailed recommendations from the perspective of various disciplines associated with stroke, this consensus-based recommendation paper is not only a useful guide to address clinical questions in practice for the clinical management of dysphagia in terms of management, diagnosis, and follow-up, but also includes detailed comments for these topics.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi study; Diagnosis; Dysphagia; Follow-up; Management; Recommendation; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33687558 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-021-10273-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438