Logo image
Dysphagia in Stroke, Neurodegenerative Disease, and Advanced Dementia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Dysphagia in Stroke, Neurodegenerative Disease, and Advanced Dementia

Kenneth W. Altman, Amanda Richards, Leanne Goldberg, Steven Frucht and Daniel J. McCabe
Otolaryngologic clinics of North America, Vol.46(6), pp.1137-1149
12/01/2013
PMID: 24262965

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Otorhinolaryngology Science & Technology
Aspiration risk from dysphagia increases with central and peripheral neurologic disease. Stroke, microvascular ischemic disease, a spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases, and advancing dementia all have unique aspects. However, there are distinct commonalities in this population. Increasing nutritional requirements to stave off oropharyngeal muscular atrophy and a sedentary lifestyle further tax the patient's abilities to safely swallow. This article reviews stroke, muscular dystrophy, myasthenia gravis, multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and advanced dementia. Approaches to screening and evaluation, recognizing sentinel indicators of decline that increase aspiration risk, and options for managing global laryngeal dysfunction are also presented.

Metrics

Details

Logo image