| Literature DB >> 34064095 |
Dorte Melgaard1, Albert Westergren2,3, Conni Skrubbeltrang4, David Smithard5,6.
Abstract
Oropharyngeal dysphagia is common in nursing home residents. The objective of this scoping review was to summarize and disseminate the findings from the literature on interventions for dysphagia in nursing home residents. Searches were conducted in four databases. The criteria for including the studies were nursing home residents, dysphagia, interventions, original research, published in English, Danish, Norwegian, or Swedish with no restriction placed regarding publication date. Excluded were literature reviews, editorial comments, conference abstracts, protocols, papers not available in full text, and studies with a mixed population, for example, geriatric patients and nursing home residents and where the results were not separated between the groups. A total of 14 papers were included and analyzed. The included papers represented interventions focusing on feeding intervention, oral hygiene, caregiver algorithm, stimulation (taste and smell), teaching the residents what to eat, mobilization of the spine, exercises/training, and positioning. This scoping review identifies sparse knowledge about interventions affecting nursing home residents' dysphagia. But the results indicate that multi-component interventions, including staff training, training of residents, and/or next of kin, might be successful. This scoping review clarifies that there is a need for well-designed studies that uncover which specific interventions have an effect in relation to nursing home residents with dysphagia and can serve as a guide for designing multi-component person-centered intervention studies. Future studies should implement high evidence study designs, define the measures of dysphagia, and quantify the severity of dysphagia, its underlying diseases, and comorbidities.Entities:
Keywords: care facility; dysphagia; nursing home; nutrition; pneumonia; swallowing disorders
Year: 2021 PMID: 34064095 PMCID: PMC8162353 DOI: 10.3390/geriatrics6020055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geriatrics (Basel) ISSN: 2308-3417
Figure 1Search strategy Embase.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram for scoping reviews, adapted from Tricco et al. [27]. The included studies took place in the United States (n = 6), Taiwan (n = 2), Canada (n = 1), the Netherlands (n = 1), Japan (n = 1), Korea (n = 1), Italy (n = 1), and Belgium (n = 1).
Summary of study details and population (sorted after publication year).
| Study Aim(s) | Study Design, Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria, Intervention, Data Collection and Analysis Methods | Study Participants | Primary Outcomes | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Klor, B M et al., 1999 [ | Determining the effects of swallowing therapy. | Intervention study. | The ability to take oral feeding. | All patients had positive effect of the treatment, and oral feeding was introduced in all patients. PEG tubes were removed in 10 of the 16 patients. A mean weight gain of 5.1 pounds and a mean albumin increase of 0.5 g/dL were reached. | |
| Lin L et al., 2003 [ | Examining the functional swallowing | Quasi-experimental parallel cluster design. 7 nursing homes. | Control group | Swallowing volume and swallowing speed. | Mean differences in volume per second, volume per swallow, mid-arm circumference and body weight between pre- and post-training of the experimental group were significantly higher than for the control group, while mean differences in neurological examination and choking frequency during meals for the experimental group were significantly lower than in the control group. |
| Pelletier C A et al., 2003 [ | Investigate the effect of sour (citric acid) and sweet-sour taste. | Controlled clinical trial. | Swallowing | Citric acid improved swallowing (i.e., less aspiration and penetration) compared with water. Teaspoon delivery of liquids significantly reduced aspiration and penetration compared with natural cup drinking. | |
| Ebihara et al., 2006 [ | Determine the effect of olfactory stimulation | Randomized, controlled study. | Latency of the swallowing reflex (LTSR), the number of swallowing movements, serum substance P, and regional cerebral blood flow. | Nasal inhalation of BPO for 1-min shortened LTSR, compared with that of lavender oil and distilled water ( | |
| Taylor, K A et al., 2006 [ | Assessing energy content in five vs. three daily meals would improve energy intake. | Crossover study. | Energy intake. | Average energy intakes were similar between the three- and five-meal patterns (1325 ± 207 kcal/day vs. 1342 ± 177 kcal/day, respectively; | |
| Bautmans, I et al., 2008 [ | Investigating the feasibility of cervical spine mobilization in elderly dementia nursing home residents with dysphagia | A randomized controlled trial with crossover design. | Feasibility (attendance, hostility to therapy, complications) and dysphagia limit (maximal volume of water (0–20 mL) that can be swallowed in a single movement) | 90% of cervical spine mobilization sessions were completed successfully, and no complications were observed. Swallowing capacity improved significantly from 3 mL to 5 mL after one session ( | |
| Quaglia- | Identify the feasibility of a multi-component intervention protocol consisting of three different interventions. | Randomized feasibility study. | Reduction in the frequency of cough during swallowing— | Episodes of cough during swallowing were reduced at the end of 3 months in 6 of 8 (75%) participants assigned to manual brushing, 3 of 7 (43%) of participants assigned to feeding positioning, and 3 of 7 (43%) of participants assigned to instruction in swallowing techniques. Manual brushing was not significantly more effective than the other two intervention protocols | |
| Hanson, L C et al., 2011 [ | Testing whether a decision aid, compared to usual care, could improve the quality of decision-making by next-of-kins for nursing home residents with advanced | Randomised controlled study in 24 nursing homes. | Next of kins decisional conflict at 3 months, knowledge about dementia and feeding options, frequency of communication with health care providers, and use of feeding treatments. | Next of kins in both groups experienced the same level of decisional conflict at the time of study enrollment. After 3 months next of kins who received the decision aid had significantly lower (better) scores on the Decisional Conflict Scale than surrogates receiving usual care (1.65 vs. 1.97, | |
| Park et al., 2015 [ | To examine the effect of an evidence-based nursing care algorithm | Control intervention study.Inclusion criteria were ≥65 years, living on the same floor, remained min. 6 months in the nursing home and oral intake, dysphagia (Gugging Swallowing Screen). | Dysphagia-related quality of life and risk of aspiration | Improvement of dysphagia-related quality of life and reducing the risk of aspiration | |
| Benigas, J et al., 2016 [ | Determine the effect of teaching persons with dementia to use compensatory swallowing strategies paired with an external memory aid. | Pilot study. | The response was considered correct only if all the responses were performed in the correct order. | The use of a visual aid was functionally related to improvements in 2–3 compensatory swallowing behaviors for each of the 5 participants. | |
| Chen L L et al., 2016 [ | Investigate the effects of an optimal feeding intervention | Prospective cohort study. | Swallowing function measured with the Kubota water swallow test, type and amount of food intake, and nutritional status. | Patients’ eating/feeding abilities improved overall, including significantly increased food intake ( | |
| Hollaar, V et al., 2017 [ | Assessing the effect of a 0.05% chlorhexidine-containing solution in addition to daily oral hygiene care. | Controlled clinical trial. 17 nursing homes. | Episodes of pneumonia | Survival analysis showed no significant difference in the incidence of pneumonia between both groups. After adjustment for group and FOIS-level, regression analysis showed that the variables age, gender, CDS score, number of diseases, medication use, number of teeth, and the presence of dental implants or removable dentures were not significantly associated with the incidence of pneumonia. | |
| Jablonski R A et al., 2017 [ | Determine the safety of a mouth care protocol for nursing home care residents with dysphagia and no access to suction equipment. | Feasibility study. | Microbe abundance | The mouth care protocol resulted in improved oral hygiene without aspiration. | |
| Zanini, M et al., 2017 [ | Assess changes in daily food intake following the introduction of meals with modified textures and an adequate content of proteins, calories, | Intervention study in 20 nursing homes. Inclusion criteria: nursing home residents ≥ 65 years, CIRS-score < 6 and diagnosed with dysphagia (diagnosis of dysphagia in medical record). | Nutritional status (anthropometric parameters, plasmatic biochemical nutritional parameters, and nutritional screening tools) | The total mean BMI of the sample increased from 17.88 to 19.00; body weight averagely improved by 7.19%. There was a progressive improvement of total protein and serum albumin values. No side effects were reported. |
BMI, Body Mass Index; BP, Black Pepper Oil; CDS, Care-Dependency Scale; CIRS, Cumulative Illness Scale; DOSS, Dysphagia Outcome Severity Scale; FEES, Fiber-Optic Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing; FOIS, Functional Oral Intake Scale; Katz Index, The Katz Index of Independence of Activities of Daily living; LTSR, Latency of The Swallowing Reflex; MDS, Minimum Data Set; MNA, Mini Nutritional Assessment; PAS, Penetration–Aspiration Scale; PEG, Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy; SP, Serum Substance P.
Embase.com.
| No. | Query | Results |
|---|---|---|
| #10 | #8 NOT #9 | 524 |
| #9 | ‘conference abstract’/it | 3,821,947 |
| #8 | #4 AND #7 | 770 |
| #7 | #5 OR #6 | 90,774 |
| #6 | ‘nursing home*’:ti,ab,kw OR ‘convalescen* home*’:ti,ab,kw OR ‘care facilit*’:ti,ab,kw OR residental*:ti,ab,kw | 67,473 |
| #5 | ‘nursing home’/exp | 54,278 |
| #4 | #1 OR #2 OR #3 | 85,589 |
| #3 | dysphagia*:ti,ab,kw OR presbyphagia*:ti,ab,kw | 49,134 |
| #2 | ((deglutition OR swallowing) NEAR/3 (disorder OR dysfunct* OR problem* OR difficult*)):ti,ab,kw | 8952 |
| #1 | ‘dysphagia’/exp | 75,637 |
Cochrane Library.
| ID | Search | Hits |
|---|---|---|
| #1 | MeSH descriptor: [Nursing Homes] explode all trees | 1334 |
| #2 | (“nursing home*” OR “convalescence home*” OR “convalescent home*” OR “care facilit*” OR residental*):ti,ab,kw | 3363 |
| #3 | #1 OR #2 | 3803 |
| #4 | MeSH descriptor: [Deglutition Disorders] explode all trees | 2834 |
| #5 | (((deglutition OR swallowing) NEAR/3 (disorder OR dysfunct* OR problem* OR difficult*))):ti,ab,kw | 804 |
| #6 | (dysphagia* OR presbyphagia*):ti,ab,kw | 4057 |
| #7 | #4 OR #5 OR #6 | 6590 |
| #8 | #3 AND #7 | 34 |
Cinahl.
| Search ID# | Search Terms | Results |
|---|---|---|
| S8 | S4 AND S7 | 415 |
| S7 | S5 OR S6 | 69,092 |
| S6 | “nursing home*” OR “convalescen* home*” OR “care facilit*” OR residental* | 66,004 |
| S5 | (MH “Nursing Homes+”) | 27,595 |
| S4 | S1 OR S2 OR S3 | 13,469 |
| S3 | dysphagia* OR presbyphagia* | 8683 |
| S2 | ((deglutition OR swallowing) N3 (disorder OR dysfunct* OR problem* OR difficult*)) | 9720 |
| S1 | (MH “Deglutition Disorders”) | 8508 |