MedPath

Effects of Age and Age-Related Diseases on Swallowing

Phase 2
Completed
Conditions
Dysphagia
Interventions
Behavioral: Lingual Strengthening
Registration Number
NCT00038350
Lead Sponsor
US Department of Veterans Affairs
Brief Summary

The long-term goal of this research program is to advance the treatment of swallowing disorders in elderly adults. This study will identify the impact of an 8-week progressive resistance exercise program for oral muscles on swallowing physiology, anatomy, dietary intake, and Quality of Life (QOL) in frail dysphagic adults. Findings from the exercise program may indicate new directions for treatments and techniques designed to influence the biological underpinnings of dysphagia in elderly persons. Translation of these findings into clinical practice will have far-reaching significance in the fields of gerontology, speech language pathology, and long-term care.

Detailed Description

The overall goal of the proposed research is to evaluate the effects of lingual resistance exercise on swallowing and related outcomes in frail elderly patients with dysphagia. In addition, we will determine if there are prognostic factors that will allow us to predict for whom the intervention is most effective. For all objectives, frail, dysphagic patients will be randomized into 2 treatment groups: a) standard swallowing treatment and an 8-week tongue exercise program, or b) standard swallowing treatment and an 8-week hand exercise program, which serves as a "sham" intervention.

Objective 1: To quantify the effects of the exercise program on bolus flow which are: a) direction as measured by the Penetration Aspiration Scale; b) completeness (residual rating scale 7) and; c) duration in msec.

Objective 2: To quantify the effects of the exercise program on oropharyngeal physiology including lingual pressure (a surrogate for strength) and kinematics of the hyolaryngeal complex and opening of the upper esophageal sphincter (UES) and to determine the contributions of these measures to bolus flow and functional outcomes including swallowing-specific quality of life and dietary intake.

Objective 3: To quantify the underlying changes in lingual volume and tissue composition resulting from participation in the exercise program.

Objective 4: To determine the effect of an 8-week lingual resistance exercise program on swallowing function, as quantified by a valid, reliable measure of swallowing-related quality of life (QOL) and dietary intake.

Objective 5: To explore the time course of the response by examining outcomes after 4 and after 8 weeks of exercise.

All objectives will be pursued in parallel across the 3 years of research. Milestones for accomplishing these objectives include: (1) Year 1: implementing procedures, manuals, and instrumentation for strength testing and training by Month 4; enrolling 24 subjects by Month 12; (2) Year 2: enrolling 40 subjects by Month 24 and writing a preliminary manuscript; (3) Year 3: completing subject enrollment by Month 30, which requires 16 additional subjects, completing statistical analyses regarding intervention effects by Month 34, and completing 2 comprehensive reports on results by Month 36.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria

Age of 65 or older, MD determined medical stability, referred by MD for swallowing evaluation because of suspected dysphagia, confirmed dysphagia by x-ray evaluation, geographic access to return for clinic appointments, telephone in home, ability to perform exercises, capacity to provide informed consent, frailty defined by Winograd et al

Exclusion Criteria

Admitted from a nursing home after a longer than 3 month stay, previously enrolled in this study, not able or willing to return for outpatient visits, unable to complete telephone interviews, cerebrovascular accident within 90 days, medically unstable as determined by MD, claustrophobia, known contraindications to MR imaging (e.g., pacemaker, aneurysm clip), more than 2 dental crowns, poorly controlled psychosis, refractory alcoholism, other severe disabling diseases resistant to medical management (e.g., class IV congestive heart failure, end stage renal disease), allergy to barium, terminally ill (predicted survival less than 6 months)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
1Lingual Strengthening8 week lingual strengthening exercise protocol
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Oropharyngeal physiology including lingual pressure and measures of bolus flow8 week protocol
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Wlliam S. Middleton Memorial Veterans Hospital, Madison

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Madison, Wisconsin, United States

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