Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the effects of combined early oral healthcare and early mobilisation on the incidence of stroke-associated pneumonia during hospitalisation of acute stroke patients. Materials and methodsIn this single-centre, non-blinded, before-and-after cohort study, patients received basic stroke rehabilitation by a multidisciplinary team within 72 h of symptom onset from July to September 2016 and from July to September 2018. Patients were divided into two groups: 1) patients who received combined early oral healthcare and early mobilisation (early intervention group) (n=107), and 2) patients who received usual care (control group) (n=107). The relationship between the stroke-associated pneumonia incidence and prognosis was examined. ResultsThe early intervention group had a significantly lower incidence of stroke-associated pneumonia than the control group (0.93% vs. 7.48%; P=0.01). Moreover, the early intervention group had a significantly lower proportion of patients who died or required medical care because of recurrent pneumonia at discharge (0.93% vs. 5.6%; P=0.04). In contrast, there were no significant differences between the two groups regarding the Revised Hasegawa's Dementia Scale on day 14 (22.5 vs. 23; P=0.87), Functional Independence Measure on day 14 (112 vs. 116; P=0.06), and rate of total oral diet (Food Intake LEVEL Scale ≥7) at discharge (95.2% vs. 93.5%; P=0.55). ConclusionsCombined early oral healthcare and early mobilisation by a multidisciplinary team significantly decreased the stroke-associated pneumonia incidence within 7 days and reduced the percentage of patients who died or required medical care because of recurrent pneumonia after stroke.
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