AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explored whether older adults in long-term care should change from a normal diet to a dysphagia diet over a year-long period.
  • It utilized various factors like age, sex, BMI, and oral assessments to evaluate dietary needs, finding notable differences in those who switched diets compared to those who didn't.
  • The findings suggest that regular simple assessments can help identify if an older adult needs a different food form to align with their eating and swallowing abilities.

Article Abstract

This one-year multicenter longitudinal study aimed to assess whether older adult residents of long-term care facilities should switch from a normal to a dysphagia diet. Using the results of our previous cross-sectional study as baseline, older adults were subdivided into those who maintained a normal diet and those who switched to a dysphagia diet. The explanatory variables were age, sex, body mass index (BMI), Barthel Index, clinical dementia rating (CDR), and 13 simple and 5 objective oral assessments (remaining teeth, functional teeth, oral diadochokinesis, modified water swallowing test, and repetitive saliva swallowing test), which were used in binomial logistic regression analysis. Between-group comparison showed a significantly different BMI, Barthel Index, and CDR. Significant differences were also observed in simple assessments for language, drooling, tongue movement, perioral muscle function, and rinsing and in objective assessments. In multi-level analysis, switching from a normal to a dysphagia diet was significantly associated with simple assessments of tongue movement, perioral muscle function, and rinsing and with the objective assessment of the number of functional teeth. The results suggest that simple assessments can be performed regularly to screen for early signs of discrepancies between food form and eating/swallowing functions, which could lead to the provision of more appropriate food forms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9180175PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19116586DOI Listing

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