Abstract

ABSTRACT Purpose: to identify, in the clinical assessment of swallowing, signs indicating silent aspiration in ischemic stroke patients. Methods: forty-six patients were assessed, 17 days being the mean time elapsed from the stroke to the swallowing assessment. The clinical assessment encompassed structural and functional aspects, oximetry monitoring, and cervical auscultation. During the videofluoroscopy examination, the patients were also monitored with pulse oximetry. In both assessments, the patients were given 100 ml of liquid. In the statistical analysis, the exact logistic regression test and odds ratio calculation were used, with a 0.05 significance level. Results: seven, out of the 46 patients, presented aspiration, which was silent in six of them. Change in the cervical auscultation, in the clinical assessment (OR: 18.8; 95% CI: 1.2 - 1000, p = 0.03), was associated with silent aspiration, as detected in the videofluoroscopy. The hawking present in the analysis of the recording (OR: 12.2; 95% CI: 1.23 - ∞, p = 0.03), was associated with possible non-silent laryngotracheal penetrations and aspirations. No change was identified regarding oxygen saturation in patients presented with silent aspiration. Conclusion: the change in cervical auscultation observed in the clinical assessment can indicate silent aspiration in patients affected by an ischemic stroke.

Highlights

  • One of the main causes of post-stroke death is aspiration pneumonia[1,2,3]

  • Silent aspiration is defined as the entrance of gastric or oropharyngeal material below the vocal folds without coughing, choking, or any sign that indicates the occurrence of aspiration[7,8]

  • This study aimed to identify signs in the clinical assessment of swallowing that indicate silent aspiration, with the hypothesis that the clinical assessment of ischemic stroke patients is changed when silent aspiration occurs

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Summary

Introduction

The risk of dysphagic patients to develop pneumonia is eight times greater[4]; in those with airway aspiration, such risk increases to 11 times[5]. Silent aspiration is defined as the entrance of gastric or oropharyngeal material below the vocal folds without coughing, choking, or any sign that indicates the occurrence of aspiration[7,8]. It is present in 15 to 39% of the subacute stroke patients and 2 to 25% of the acute stroke patients[9]

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