AI Article Synopsis

  • The study tested the validity of the Tongueometer, a new affordable tongue pressure measurement device, against the established Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI).
  • Adults without difficulty swallowing were measured using both devices in a randomized order to assess their tongue pressure and endurance.
  • Results showed that the Tongueometer consistently produced lower measurements than the IOPI, indicating that clinicians should refer to specific normative data for each device when assessing patient results.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Tongue manometry (i.e., tongue pressure measurement) is a commonly used assessment for patients with suspected oral-motor involvement in swallowing disorders. Availability of lingual manometry has changed in recent years, with the introduction of the Tongueometer device being a more affordable tongue manometry system. The purpose of this study was to test concurrent (criterion) validity of the Tongueometer compared to the current standard reference device, the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI).

Method: Adults without dysphagia were recruited for participation in this study. Standard lingual measurements (swallowing-related pressures, maximum isometric pressure [MIP], and maximum isometric endurance) were recorded, with the bulb anteriorly placed, with both devices, in a randomized order. The Bland-Altman method was used to determine concurrent (criterion) validity of these measurements compared to the clinical standard IOPI device. A recently available suggested corrective value by Curtis et al. (2023) was also applied, with comparisons made between devices both with and without the Curtis correction.

Results: The final sample included 70 adult participants aged 20-89 years ( = 52.3 years). Measures with the Tongueometer device were significantly lower when compared with the same measures taken using the IOPI ( < .01) for all measures including MIP, endurance, and swallow pressures. The correction suggested by Curtis and colleagues did not ameliorate these differences.

Conclusions: The Tongueometer lingual measurements were consistently lower compared to the IOPI. Clinical use of values taken with the Tongueometer device should be compared to normative data published for each specific device. Available features of each device (e.g., display, bulb texture, technology/application) should be considered when selecting which device to use with an individual patient.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11253644PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2024_AJSLP-23-00478DOI Listing

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