一项描述性纵向研究:康复科对 COVID 后患者吞咽困难的治疗方法。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-19 DOI:10.23736/S1973-9087.24.08234-0
Anna Guillen-Sola, Cindry Ramírez, Sonia Nieto, Esther Duarte, Marta Tejero, Christian Grillo, Helena Bel, Roser Boza
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:COVID-19住院病人中有很高比例存在吞咽困难,但往往诊断不足,得不到治疗,导致吞咽困难持续时间长,恢复期长。目的:鉴于呼吸肌训练(IEMT)和神经肌肉刺激(NMES)在吞咽困难治疗中的潜在益处,本研究旨在评估用于治疗 COVID-19 长期住院患者吞咽困难的方案的可行性:观察性、描述性、前瞻性研究:对象: 58 名 COVID-19 患者:对 58 名 COVID-19 患者入院接受强化康复治疗(2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 10 月)进行前瞻性研究:通过视频荧光镜诊断出吞咽困难,并采用为期3周的方案进行治疗,该方案改编自运动阈值神经肌肉刺激(NMES)和吸气/呼气肌力训练(IEMST),每天3次,每次5组,共3周。根据坚持情况、取得的成果以及不良/预期事件的发生情况来评估可行性。对呼吸功能(咳嗽峰值流量、最大吸气/呼气压力)和吞咽功能(通过视频荧光镜测量的穿透-吸气量表和胃液残留量表)进行了描述性统计记录,对数值数据采用学生 t 检验,对序数变量采用 Wilcoxon 检验。统计分析采用 SPPSS vs28 和 STATA 15.1 版(StataCorp,College Station,Texas,USA)。结果显示,吞咽困难的发生率很高:吞咽困难在严重的 COVID-19 患者中非常普遍(86.6%);经过 3 周的干预后,所有呼吸和吞咽参数均有所改善,18 名依赖管饲的患者中有 12 人恢复了正常饮食(66.7%;McNemar P=0.03),84.09% 的患者出院时参加了无限制饮食。治疗依从性为 85%。未发现重大不良事件:我们得出的结论是,基于 IEMT 和 NMES 的结构化吞咽运动训练干预对 COVID 后长期住院患者是可行且安全的:临床康复的影响:描述用于治疗 COVID 后患者吞咽困难的康复方案将有助于我们优化各中心的可用技术,并促使患者更快康复,避免潜在并发症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Therapeutic approach to dysphagia in post-COVID patients in a rehabilitation unit: a descriptive longitudinal study.

Background: A high rate of hospitalized patients for COVID-19 had dysphagia, frequently underdiagnosed, and not treated, inducing a prolonged dysphagia with protracted recovery. Specific treatments and protocols have not been well described yet.

Aim: Given the potential benefits of respiratory muscle training (IEMT) and neuromuscular stimulation (NMES) in dysphagia treatment, this study aimed to assess the feasibility of the protocol used for treating dysphagia in patients who experienced prolonged hospitalization for COVID-19.

Design: Observational, descriptive, prospective study.

Setting: Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation of a tertiary University hospital.

Population: Fifty-eight COVID-19 patients were admitted for intensive rehabilitation (March 2020 to October 2021) were prospectively studied.

Methods: Dysphagia was diagnosed using videofluoroscopy and treated with a 3-week protocol adapted from neuromuscular stimulation (NMES) in a motor threshold and inspiratory/expiratory muscle strength training (IEMST), five sets of five repetitions three times daily for 3 weeks. Feasibility was assessed with adherence, outcomes achieved, and occurrence of adverse/unexpected events. Respiratory function (peak cough flow, maximal inspiratory/expiratory pressures) and swallow function (Penetration-Aspiration Scale and Bolus Residue Scale measured by videofluoroscopy) were recorded descriptive statistics, Student's t test for numerical data, and Wilcoxon Test for ordinal variables were applied. SPPSS vs28 and STATA version 15.1 (StataCorp, College Station, TX, USA) were used for statistical analysis. P values 0.05 were considered significant.

Results: Dysphagia was highly prevalent in severe COVID-19 patients (86.6%); all respiratory and swallow parameters improved after a 3-week intervention and 12 of 18 patients dependent on tube feeding resumed a normal diet (66.7%; McNemar P=0.03), and 84.09% attended a no restriction diet at discharge. Adherence to treatment was 85%. No significant adverse events were detected.

Conclusions: We conclude that a structured swallowing-exercise training intervention based on IEMT and NMES is feasible and safe in prolonged hospitalization post-COVID patients.

Clinical rehabilitation impact: To describe rehabilitation protocols used to treat dysphagia in post-COVID patients will help us to optimize the available techniques in each center and to induce a faster recovery avoiding potential complications.

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