RééDOC
75 Boulevard Lobau
54042 NANCY cedex

Christelle Grandidier Documentaliste
03 83 52 67 64


F Nous contacter

0

Article

--";3! O
     

-A +A

Swallowing and prevention of complications

ONEILL PA
BR MED BULL , 2000, vol. 56, n° 2, p. 457-465
Doc n°: 97582
Localisation : Documentation IRR
Descripteurs : AF21 - ACCIDENTS VASCULAIRES CEREBRAUX, AD35 - DYSPHAGIE

Dysphagia occurs in up to half of patients following a stroke. In most, it is transient with only about 1 in 10 of patients having any swallowing problems at 6 months. Persistent dysphagia may be due to lack of bilateral cerebral hemisphere representation of the oral and pharyngeal musculature involved in swallowing. Thus, the unaffected hemisphere is unable to take over the function of the damaged side. Bedside assessment is not a good predictor of aspiration on videofluoroscopy, but measurement of oxygen saturation may improve this. Nevertheless, clinical detection of dysphagia may be the more powerful predictor of an increased mortality and morbidity, including pneumonia, water depletion and poor nutrition. Dysphagia is also closely related to poor nutrition following stroke, but we do not know whether feeding support will improve outcome. Major trials are on-going

Langue : ANGLAIS

Tiré à part : OUI

Identifiant basis : 2000213508

Mes paniers

4

Gerer mes paniers

0