AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the Functional Bedside Aspiration Screen (FBAS) for predicting aspiration risk in patients with acute stroke, using a sample of 101 ischemic stroke patients.
  • - Results showed FBAS had varying sensitivity (65.8% for penetration risk and 73% for aspiration risk) and specificity (70.2% for penetration and 62% for aspiration), with higher accuracy in patients with milder strokes.
  • - FBAS scores correlated with the need for therapeutic interventions and dietary changes, suggesting it could serve as a quick assessment tool in environments lacking more advanced testing options, though further research with more participants is needed.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the reliability of the novel Functional Bedside Aspiration Screen (FBAS) to predict aspiration risk in acute stroke and to guide initial therapy needs. We conducted a prospective validation study of the FBAS 10-point scale in 101 acute ischemic stroke patients. Outcome measures were compared with the Penetration Aspiration Scale (PAS) via the Flexible Endoscopic Swallowing Study. Correlations with the Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS) and the Therapy Requirement Scale (TRS) were analyzed. We observed a 65.8% sensitivity and 70.2% specificity ( = 0.004) for predicting penetration risk (for PAS score ≥ 3) and a 73% sensitivity and 62% specificity for predicting aspiration risk (PAS score ≥ 6). For patients with a modified ranking scale 0-2 ( = 44) on admission, the predictive measurements of the FBAS yielded sensitivity and specificity values of 66.7% and 88.6% ( = 0.011). A significant negative correlation was found with PAS measurements, whereas a positive correlation was observed regarding FOIS. Significantly lower FBAS scores were observed in patients with high requirements for therapeutic interventions and dietary modification. FBAS may be regarded as an alternative time-efficient clinical support tool in settings in which instrumentation is not directly accessible. Further studies including a larger cohort of acute stroke patients with more severe neurological deficits are necessary.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9737958PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11237087DOI Listing

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