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Long-Term Effectiveness of Physical Exercise-Based Swallowing Interventions for Older Adults with Dementia in a Day-Care Center. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Swallowing safety is a major health issue for individuals with dementia, as coughing and choking indicate difficulties in this area.
  • This study analyzed data from a dementia day-care center to evaluate the impact of regular physical exercise on reducing these coughing and choking incidents.
  • Results showed that those participating in exercise programs experienced significant long-term decreases in coughing/choking, while those who could not comply had shorter-term benefits and typically exhibited more advanced dementia.

Article Abstract

Swallowing safety is one of the top health concerns of dementia. Coughing and choking (coughing/choking) are signs of impaired swallowing safety. This study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of regular physical exercise-based swallowing intervention for reducing coughing-choking at the dementia day-care center. This was a retrospective analysis with data from medical records, including age, the clinical dementia rating (CDR), and the frequencies of coughing/choking in ten days (10-day coughing/choking). Those who complied with the exercise programs were assigned to the exercise-based group (n = 22), and those who could not comply were assigned to the non-exercised-based group (n = 7). The non-exercised-based group showed more advanced age and higher CDR than the exercise-based group ( < 0.05). The 10-day coughing/choking showed significant decreases at the 5-month and 19-month in the exercise-based group and at the 5-month in the non-exercise-based group ( < 0.05). Our findings suggested that regular physical exercise-based swallowing intervention effectively alleviated coughing/choking problems of older adults with dementia and its effectiveness was long-lasting. For those who could not comply with exercise programs, noticeably with more advanced age and dementia, the effective swallowing intervention period was short-term.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10178008PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11091262DOI Listing

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