Department of Physiotherapy, Inselspital, University Hospital of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Inselspital, University Hospital of Bern, University of Bern, Freiburgstrasse 18, 3010, Bern, Switzerland.
Dysphagia. 2019 Aug;34(4):475-486. doi: 10.1007/s00455-019-09977-w. Epub 2019 Jan 25.
Swallowing disorders and respective consequences (including aspiration-induced pneumonia) are often observed in extubated ICU patients with data indicating that a large number of patients are affected. We recently demonstrated in a large-scale analysis that the incidence of post-extubation dysphagia (PED) is 12.4% in a general ICU population and about 18% in emergency admissions to the ICU. Importantly, PED was mostly sustained until hospital discharge and independently predicted 28- and 90-day mortality. Although oropharyngeal/laryngeal trauma, neuromuscular ICU-acquired weakness, reduced sensation/sensorium, dyssynchronous breathing, and gastrointestinal reflux, are all considered to contribute to PED, little is known about the underlying pathomechanisms and risk factors leading to PED in critically ill patients. Systematic screening of all potential ICU patients for oropharyngeal dysphagia (OD) seems key for early recognition and follow-up, as well as the design and testing of novel therapeutic interventions. Today, screening methods and clinical investigations for dysphagia differ considerably. In the context of a recently proposed pragmatic screening algorithm introduced by us, we provide a concise review on currently available non-instrumental techniques that could potentially serve for non-instrumental OD assessment in critically ill patients. Following systematic literature review, we find that non-instrumental OD assessments were mostly tested in different patient populations with only a minority of studies performed in critically ill patients. Due to little available data on non-instrumental dysphagia assessment in the ICU, future investigations should aim to validate respective approaches in the critically ill against an instrumental (gold) standard, for example, flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing. An international expert panel is encouraged to addresses critical illness-related definitions, screening and confirmatory assessment approaches, treatment recommendations, and identifies optimal patient-centered outcome measures for future clinical investigations.
吞咽障碍及相关后果(包括吸入性肺炎)在 ICU 拔管患者中经常观察到,有数据表明大量患者受到影响。我们最近在一项大规模分析中表明,普通 ICU 人群中发生拔管后吞咽困难(PED)的发生率为 12.4%,而 ICU 急诊患者则约为 18%。重要的是,PED 大多持续到出院,并独立预测 28 天和 90 天的死亡率。尽管口咽/喉创伤、ICU 获得性神经肌肉无力、感觉/意识减退、呼吸不同步和胃食管反流均被认为与 PED 有关,但对于导致危重病患者 PED 的潜在发病机制和危险因素知之甚少。对所有潜在 ICU 患者进行口咽吞咽困难(OD)的系统筛查似乎是早期识别和随访以及设计和测试新治疗干预措施的关键。如今,吞咽困难的筛查方法和临床研究差异很大。在我们提出的一种新的实用筛查算法的背景下,我们对目前可用于评估危重病患者非仪器 OD 的潜在非仪器技术进行了简明综述。经过系统的文献回顾,我们发现非仪器 OD 评估主要在不同的患者人群中进行测试,只有少数研究在危重病患者中进行。由于 ICU 中非仪器性吞咽困难评估的可用数据很少,未来的研究应旨在针对危重患者将各自的方法与仪器(金)标准进行验证,例如,吞咽的灵活内镜评估。鼓励一个国际专家小组解决与危重病相关的定义、筛查和确认评估方法、治疗建议,并确定未来临床研究的最佳以患者为中心的结果衡量标准。