The impact of physical therapy intervention of dysphagia on preventing pneumonia in acute stroke patients: A randomized controlled trial

Author:

Darwish Moshera1,El‐Tamawy Mohammed S.2,Mahmoud Aya3,Ali Ahmed S.14,Khalifa Heba A.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Therapy for Neurology and Neurosurgery Faculty of Physical Therapy Cairo University Giza Egypt

2. Department of Neurology Faculty of Medicine Cairo University Cairo Egypt

3. Department of Physical Therapy for Neurology Kasr El‐Aini hospitals Cairo University Cairo Egypt

4. Department of Physical Therapy and Health Rehabilitation College of Applied Medical Sciences Jouf University Al‐Qurayyat Saudi Arabia

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesDysphagia is a common complication following stroke. It corresponds to the development of pneumonia, which is always associated with bad prognosis, longer hospital stays and increased mortality. The aim of the study was to assess the impact of physical therapy intervention of dysphagia on preventing pneumonia in acute stroke patients.MethodsA single‐blind randomized controlled trial was carried out on 70 ischemic stroke patients with oropharyngeal dysphagia, age ranged from 49 to 65 years. They were randomly assigned to two groups (control and study) of equal number. Patients in the control group received oral care and nasogastric tube feeding, while patients in the study group received the same program in addition to the designed physical therapy program (exercises and neuromuscular electrical stimulation). The intervention program was applied for 40 min/session, 1 session/day, and 5 days/week for 4 weeks. Gugging swallowing screen (GUSS), and stroke associated pneumonia (SAP) control and prevention criteria were used to assess dysphagia and incidence of pneumonia at baseline, after two and 4 weeks of intervention for both groups.ResultsBefore treatment, all patients were susceptible to pneumonia after two and 4 weeks of intervention; there were a significant increase in GUSS score in both groups with more improvement in favor of the study group (p < 0.05) and a statistically significant increase in incidence of SAP after 2 weeks of intervention only in the control group (p < 0.05). The results also showed a significant negative correlation between GUSS score and SAP (r = − 0.3662, p = 0.0018)Implications for Physiotherapy Practiceadding physical therapy (exercise therapy and neuromuscular electrical stimulation) to oral care and nasogastric tube feeding is effective in improving oropharyngeal dysphagia and decreasing the incidence of aspiration pneumonia in acute ischemic stroke patients.

Publisher

Wiley

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