| Literature DB >> 36242646 |
Misao Tsubokawa1, Junko Fujitani2, Kanae Ashida3, Mika Hayase4, Namiko Kobayashi5, Chika Horita5, Masafumi Sakashita6,7, Takahiro Tokunaga8,7, Tadanori Hamano9, Ken-Ichiro Kikuta10, Shigeharu Fujieda6.
Abstract
Dysphagia diets are recommended to prevent choking and aspiration in people with dysphagia; however, rice-porridge and mashed rice-porridge, which are used as staple foods for people with dysphagia in Japan, are time-consuming to prepare. The National Agriculture and Food Research Organization has found jelly-like food products made from high-amylose rice-flour (rice-flour jelly) to be easy to prepare with a texture suitable for dysphagia diets. To investigate the potential of rice-flour jelly for the dysphagia diet, we evaluated the amount of pharyngeal residue after swallowing rice-flour jelly using fiberoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing and compared it with those of rice-porridge, mashed rice-porridge, and fruit jelly. We enrolled 70 participants (43 males and 27 females, aged 32-96 years, median 74.5 years) and evaluated their pharyngeal residue using the Yale Pharyngeal Residue Severity Rating Scale which includes five levels from I (none) to V (severe). Statistical analysis showed that level I was more common in fruit jelly for vallecula residue and pyriform sinus residue, and level III (mild) was more common in rice-porridge for vallecula residue (p < 0.05). No differences of pharyngeal residue were found in rice-flour jelly or mashed rice-porridge. No significant difference was observed in the number of participants with laryngeal penetration or aspiration. Therefore, rice-flour jelly is a suitable alternative to rice-porridge as a staple food for people with dysphagia in terms of food texture.Entities:
Keywords: Dysphagia diet; Fiberoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing; Pharyngeal residue; Rice-flour jelly
Year: 2022 PMID: 36242646 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-022-10529-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 2.733