基于设备的解决方案支持吞咽问题的患者。

IF 2.7
Expert review of medical devices Pub Date : 2025-07-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-25 DOI:10.1080/17434440.2025.2508452
Ayodele Sasegbon, Ivy Cheng, Meng Dai, Wanqi Li, Shaheen Hamdy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

吞咽是一项高度复杂的活动,需要通过中枢神经系统内多个区域的连接来协调头颈部的众多肌肉。吞咽困难是一种常见的疾病,长期以来,人们一直认为吞咽困难会对发病率、死亡率和生活质量产生重大的不良影响。治疗吞咽困难的经典方法包括临床消化学家的投入,他们教授康复练习并建议改变食物和液体的稠度。然而,支持其中一些方法的证据基础是不一致的,需要进一步和更大规模的研究来支持它们的广泛实施。涵盖领域:本文将探讨其中的一些新技术,并探讨它们将改变未来吞咽困难护理的证据。专家意见:医疗器械形成了这些康复策略的一个方面,在过去的十年中,许多针对复杂吞咽感觉运动通路或吞咽相关肌肉组织的新技术已经变得突出。这些干预措施包括无创脑刺激、吞咽相关生物反馈和外周刺激方法,这些措施是为了加强现有的管理方法而开发的。有证据表明,许多这些方法有能力增强吞咽功能和影响吞咽困难的恢复,然而,需要更多的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Device-based solutions supporting patients with swallowing problems.

Introduction: Swallowing is a highly complex activity requiring the coordination of numerous muscles within the head and neck through connections from multiple areas within the central nervous system. Dysphagia is common and has long been known to lead to significant adverse effects on morbidity, mortality, and quality of life. Classical approaches toward dysphagia management involve input by clinical deglutologists who teach rehabilitative exercises and recommend alteration of the consistency of food and fluids. However, the evidence base in support of some of these approaches is inconsistent and requires further and larger studies to support their widespread implementation.

Areas covered: This paper shall explore some of these novel techniques and explore the evidence that they will alter the future of dysphagia care.

Expert opinion: Medical devices form one aspect of these rehabilitation strategies, and over the past decade, numerous novel techniques targeting the complex swallowing sensorimotor pathway or swallowing associated musculature have come to prominence. These include interventions such as noninvasive brain stimulation, swallowing related biofeedback, and peripheral stimulation approaches, developed to bolster existing management methods. The evidence suggests that many of these approaches have the capability to enhance swallowing function and impact dysphagia recovery, however, more evidence is needed.

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