Comparative analysis of videofluoroscopy and pulse oximetry for aspiration identification in patients with dysphagia after stroke and non-dysphagics

被引:0
|
作者
Bengisu, Serkan [1 ,2 ]
Oge-Dasdogen, Oezlem [1 ,2 ]
Yildiz, Hatice Yelda [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Istanbul Atlas Univ, Fac Hlth Sci, Dept Speech & Language Therapy, Istanbul, Turkiye
[2] Istinye Univ, BAVIM Stroke Ctr, Liv Hosp, Istanbul, Turkiye
[3] Istinye Univ, Fac Med, Dept Neurol, Istanbul, Turkiye
关键词
Aspiration; Deglutition; Dysphagia; Pulse oximetry; Swallowing; Swallowing disorders; RELIABLY DETECT ASPIRATION; VISCOSITY SWALLOW TEST; OROPHARYNGEAL DYSPHAGIA; OXYGEN DESATURATION; BOLUS VOLUME;
D O I
10.1007/s00405-024-08613-0
中图分类号
R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100213 ;
摘要
Purpose Dysphagia is a prevalent symptom observed in acute stroke. Several bedside screening tests are employed for the early detection of dysphagia. Pulse oximetry emerges as a practical and supportive method to augment the existing techniques utilized during bedside swallowing assessments. Desaturation levels, as measured by pulse oximetry, are acknowledged as indicative of aspiration by certain screening tests. However, the predictive capability of pulse oximetry in determining aspiration remains a subject of controversy. The objective of this study was to compare aspiration and oxygen desaturation levels by time and aspiration severity in dysphagic patients compared to healthy controls. It also aimed to evaluate the accuracy of pulse oximetry by comparing it with VFSS findings in detecting aspiration in both liquid (IDDSI-0) and semi-solid (IDDSI-4) consistencies.Materials and methods Eighty subjects (40 healthy and 40 acute stroke patients) participated. Patients suspected of dysphagia underwent videofluoroscopy as part of the stroke unit's routine procedure. Baseline SpO2 was measured before VFSS, and stabilized values were recorded. Sequential IDDSI-0 and IDDSI-4 barium tests were conducted with 5 ml boluses. Stabilized SPO2 values were recorded during swallowing and 3-min post-feeding. Patients with non-dysphagia received equal bolus monitoring. Changes in SPO2 during, before, and after swallowing were analyzed for each consistency in both groups.Results The study revealed a statistically significant difference in SPO2 between patients with dysphagia and controls for IDDSI-4 and IDSSI-0. In IDDSI-4, 20% of patients experienced SpO2 decrease compared to 2.5% in control group (p = 0.013). For IDDSI-0, 35% of patients showed SpO2 decrease, while none in the control group did (p = 0.0001). Aspiration rates were 2.5% in IDDSI-4 and 57.5% in IDDSI-0. In IDDSI-0, SpO2 decrease significantly correlated with aspiration (p = 0.0001). In IDDSI-4, 20.5% had SpO2 decrease without aspiration, and showing no significant difference (p = 0.613). Penetration-Aspiration Scale scores had no significant association with SpO2 decrease (p = 0.602). Pulse oximetry in IDDSI-4 had limited sensitivity (0%) and positive predictive value, (0%) while in IDDSI-0, it demonstrated acceptable sensitivity (60.9%) and specificity (100%) with good discrimination capability (AUC = 0.83).Conclusions A decrease in SPO2 may indicate potential aspiration but is insufficient alone for detection. This study proposes pulse oximetry as a valuable complementary tool in assessing dysphagia but emphasizes that aspiration cannot be reliably predicted based solely on SpO2 decrease.
引用
收藏
页码:3095 / 3105
页数:11
相关论文
共 44 条
  • [1] Comparative analysis of videofluoroscopy and pulse oximetry for aspiration identification in patients with dysphagia after stroke and non-dysphagics
    Serkan Bengisu
    Özlem Öge-Daşdöğen
    Hatice Yelda Yıldız
    European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 2024, 281 : 3095 - 3105
  • [2] A preliminary comparison of videofluoroscopy of swallow and pulse oximetry in the identification of aspiration in dysphagic patients
    Sellars, C
    Dunnet, C
    Carter, R
    DYSPHAGIA, 1998, 13 (02) : 82 - 86
  • [3] A Preliminary Comparison of Videofluoroscopy of Swallow and Pulse Oximetry in the Identification of Aspiration in Dysphagic Patients
    Cameron Sellars
    Catherine Dunnet
    Roger Carter
    Dysphagia, 1998, 13 : 82 - 86
  • [4] Does pulse oximetry reliably detect aspiration in dysphagic stroke patients?
    Collins, MJ
    Bakheit, AMO
    STROKE, 1997, 28 (09) : 1773 - 1775
  • [5] Prevalence of aspiration pneumonia in patients with dysphagia after stroke
    Maxton, C.
    Harpham, D.
    Maddula, M.
    Yagnik, P.
    Miran, A.
    Everton, L.
    O'Brien, B.
    Symonds, C.
    Munshi, S.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE, 2012, 7 : 39 - 39
  • [6] Comparison for Risk Estimate of Aspiration between the Revised Dysphagia Assessment Tool and Videofluoroscopy in Post-Stroke Patients
    Moon, Kyung Hee
    Sohn, Hyun Sook
    Lee, Eun Seok
    Paek, Eun Kyung
    Kang, Eun Ju
    Lee, Seung Hee
    Han, Na Ri
    Lee, Meen Hye
    Kim, Deog Young
    Park, Chang Gi
    Yoo, Ji-Soo
    JOURNAL OF KOREAN ACADEMY OF NURSING, 2010, 40 (03) : 359 - 366
  • [7] Can pulse oximetry or a bedside swallowing assessment be used to detect aspiration after stroke?
    Ramsey, Deborah J. C.
    Smithard, David G.
    Kalra, Lalit
    STROKE, 2006, 37 (12) : 2984 - 2988
  • [8] A simple nomogram for predicting aspiration associated with dysphagia in hospitalized patients after stroke
    Lihua Chen
    Juan Li
    Fang Tian
    Huan Tang
    Zuoxiu Chen
    Chao Xue
    Mingqing Hao
    Juan Xue
    Neurological Sciences, 2024, 45 : 2729 - 2736
  • [9] A simple nomogram for predicting aspiration associated with dysphagia in hospitalized patients after stroke
    Chen, Lihua
    Li, Juan
    Tian, Fang
    Tang, Huan
    Chen, Zuoxiu
    Xue, Chao
    Hao, Mingqing
    Xue, Juan
    NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2024, 45 (06) : 2729 - 2736
  • [10] Identification of a simple screening tool for dysphagia in patients with stroke using factor analysis of multiple dysphagia variables
    Nishiwaki, K
    Tsuji, T
    Liu, MG
    Hase, K
    Tanaka, N
    Fujiwara, T
    JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE, 2005, 37 (04) : 247 - 251