Abstract

PurposeA personalised transportable folding device for seating (DATP) on a standard seat was developed by an occupational therapist at the Toulouse University Hospital Centre (patent no. WO 2011121249 A1) based on the hypothesis that the use of a seat to assist with better positioning on any chair during meals modifies the sitting posture and has an impact on cervical statics which increases the amplitude of movements of the axial skeleton (larynx and hyoid bone) and benefits swallowing. The aim of this work is to demonstrate that an improvement in sitting posture with the help of the DATP, through Hyoid bone motion, has an impact on the quality of swallowing in a dysphagic population which benefits from the device in comparison to a dysphagic population which does not benefit from the device after 1 month of care. The secondary endpoints concern the evaluation of the impact on other characteristics of swallowing, posture, the acceptability of the device and the quality of life.MethodologyThis is a randomised comparative clinical trial. The blind was not possible for the patients but the examiner who evaluated the outcome criterion was blinded to the group to which the patient belonged. The outcome criterion was the measurement of the hyoid bone movement during swallowing. The other criteria were collected during the videofluoroscopic examination of swallowing and by use of a questionnaire. Fifty-six (56) patients were included: 30 in the group without device (D−) and 26 in the group with the device (D+). All the patients benefited from a training course on seating. Only the D+ patients participated in this course where the use of the device was explained and the device was then kept for use at home for 1 month.ResultsA significant improvement was noted in the postural criteria before and after use, in favour of a better posture for the two groups (p < 0.001) and more hyoid bone motion in the D+ group. The difference was significant in the bivariate analysis for horizontal movement (p = 0.04). After adjustment of potential factors of confusion, we noted a significant mean difference for the three distances in the D+ group in comparison to the D− group, of + 0.33 (95% CI [+ 0.17; + 0.48]) for horizontal movement, + 0.22 (95% CI [+ 0.03; + 0.40]) for vertical movement and + 0.37 (95% CI = [+ 0.20; + 0.53]) for horizontal movement. However, the other parameters, and notably the other swallowing markers were not significantly modified by the use of the device.ConclusionThe personalised transportable folding device for seating developed to reduce dysphagia has an action on hyoid bone motion during swallowing. However, this positive effect on an intermediate outcome criterion of the quality of swallowing was not associated with an improvement in swallowing efficiency in the study population. The diversity of diseases with which the patients in this study were afflicted is a factor to be controlled in future studies with this device.

Highlights

  • Many swallowing rehabilitation methods are used in clinical practice: stimulation, dietary adaptations, swallowing exercises, posture and swallowing manoeuvres

  • The main endpoint of this work is to compare hyoid bone motion during swallowing in a dysphagic population which benefits from the device in comparison to a dysphagic population which does not benefit from the device after 1 month of care

  • The patients in this study were required to have a sitting abnormality determined by the seated postural control measure (SPCM, [14, 15]) and dysphagia determined by the Deglutition Handicap Index (DHI, [16,17,18])

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Summary

Introduction

Many swallowing rehabilitation methods are used in clinical practice: stimulation, dietary adaptations (texture and volume), swallowing exercises, posture and swallowing manoeuvres. Postural adaptations in terms of the positioning of the head are one of the key elements of care regardless of the aetiology [1,2,3,4]. European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology (2020) 277:179–188 global positioning adapted to the body is a prerequisite [5]. There are very few publications on the effect of the different positions of the body on swallowing. Publications on the impact of positioning on dysphagia in the presence of postural disorders are even more infrequent. They mostly concern small children [10] and disabled adults [11]

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