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Longitudinal Examination of Swallowing Safety and Vocal Fold Mobility in Cardiac Surgical Patients. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined how cardiac surgery affects swallowing safety and vocal fold mobility in 35 adults by performing evaluations before and after the surgery, revealing a significant increase in unsafe swallowing postoperatively.
  • - Results showed that only 14% of patients had safe swallowing post-surgery, compared to 60% pre-surgery, indicating a concerning rise in aspiration and penetration occurrences.
  • - Despite the increase in aspiration rates, no cases of vocal fold paralysis were detected, underscoring the need for more regular laryngoscopic examinations after surgery to monitor these conditions.

Article Abstract

Background: Aspiration and vocal fold mobility impairment (VFMI) are frequently reported in adults after cardiac surgery (CS) and impede recovery. Preoperative and postoperative laryngoscopic evaluations have not been undertaken, masking the incidence and evolution of dysphagia and VFMI in CS patients. We therefore sought to determine frequency of unsafe swallowing and VFMI before and after CS.

Methods: Thirty-five adults undergoing elective CS enrolled. Participants underwent fiberoptic endoscopic evaluations of swallowing and VFMI before and after surgical procedure. Trained raters performed duplicate, blinded ratings with the validated Penetration-Aspiration Scale, and a laryngologist performed blinded ratings of VFMI. Descriptive, Wilcoxon signed rank, and McNemar tests were performed.

Results: Preoperative swallowing safety profiles were 60% safe, 34% penetration, and 6% aspiration. Postoperative swallowing safety profiles were 14% safe, 63% penetration, and 23% aspiration. Significant differences in preoperative to postoperative swallowing outcomes were noted for Penetration-Aspiration Scale scores ( < .0001), unsafe swallowing (40% vs 86%; χ = 12.8; = .0003), and aspiration (6% vs 23%; χ =6; = .01). No differences in VFMI were noted preoperatively to postoperatively (partial VFMI, 9% vs 23%; > .05).

Conclusions: A 4-fold increase in aspiration was observed in CS patients. No cases of vocal fold paralysis were observed across time points. These data highlight the utility of instrumental laryngoscopic evaluations during the acute postoperative phase.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11172401PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atssr.2023.11.030DOI Listing

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