Abstract

Providing texture-modified food for patients with dysphagia is a cornerstone of dysphagia treatment. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a specially designed texture-modified food that can be easily swallowed while maintaining the unique taste by adjusting hardness and adhesiveness in patients with brain disorders using a videofluoroscopic swallowing study. We included 101 patients with oropharyngeal dysphagia due to brain disorders who were referred to the rehabilitation department. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a specially designed texture-modified food, rice gruel was compared with a regular instant rice porridge, and bulgogi mousse was compared with ground bulgogi, which normally serves as a texture-modified diet for patients with dysphagia in our hospital during the videofluoroscopic swallowing study. The Penetration–Aspiration Scale score, oropharyngeal transit time, number of swallows required to maximally eliminate food materials from the oropharyngeal space, and vallecular and pyriform sinus residue after swallowing scale score were compared. Rice gruel required a shorter oropharyngeal transit time and fewer number of swallowing per the given amount of food than regular instant rice porridge; however, no statistical difference was found in the vallecular and pyriform sinus residue after swallowing scale scores and the Penetration–Aspiration Scale scores. Bulgogi mousse required more swallowing and had lower Penetration–Aspiration Scale scores than ground bulgogi; however, no significant difference was found in the oropharyngeal transit time and the vallecular and pyriform sinus residue after swallowing scale scores. The study foods were safe and efficacious compared to control foods usually provided for patients with dysphagia from various brain disorders.

Highlights

  • Texture is one of the four principal quality factors in food, along with its appearance, flavor and nutrition [1]

  • In wethis aimed to we evaluate safety and efficacy specially designeddesigned study, aimed the to evaluate the safety andofefficacy of specially texture-modified foods patients dysphagia that ture-modified forwith patients with dysphagia that can be swallowed while maintaining the unique of taste foodsofby adjusting their their ha be swallowed while maintaining the taste unique foods by adjusting hardness and adhesiveness using videofluoroscopic swallowingswallowing study (VFSS)

  • A total of 101 patients were enrolled in this study (50 and 51 in the rice gruel and bulgogi mousse groups, respectively; Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Texture is one of the four principal quality factors in food, along with its appearance, flavor and nutrition [1]. It is not a single property; it is a group of physical properties derived from the structure of the food. Previous studies using kinematic analysis of dysphagia elucidated that bolus transit time and velocity are highly dependent on the patient’s medical conditions and food texture [3,4,5,6,7]. Poor adherence to texture-modified diet may lead to decreased oral intake, dehydration, increased risk of chest infection and malnutrition in patients with dysphagia [13,14,15]. No specific food texture has been demonstrated to have

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