1. Incidence, characteristics, and predictive factors for Dysphagia after pediatric traumatic brain injury.
- Author
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Morgan A, Ward E, Murdoch B, Kennedy B, and Murison R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Distribution, Brain Injuries rehabilitation, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Comorbidity, Deglutition Disorders rehabilitation, Female, Glasgow Coma Scale, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Injury Severity Score, Male, Pediatrics, Predictive Value of Tests, Probability, Queensland epidemiology, Reference Values, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Sex Distribution, Brain Injuries diagnosis, Brain Injuries epidemiology, Deglutition Disorders diagnosis, Deglutition Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: (1) To establish an incidence figure for dysphagia in a population of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases; (2) to provide descriptive data on the admitting characteristics, patterns of resolution, and outcomes of children with and without dysphagia after TBI; and (3) to identify any factors present at admission that may predict dysphagia., Participants: A total of 1,145 children consecutively admitted to an acute care setting for traumatic brain injury between July 1995 and July 2000., Main Outcome Measure: Medical parameters relating to dysphagia based on medical chart review., Results: (1) Dysphagia incidence figure of 5.3% across all pediatric head injury admissions. Incidence figures of 68% for severe TBI, 15% for moderate TBI, and only 1% for mild brain injury. (2) Statistically significant differences were found between the dysphagic and nondysphagic subgroups on the variables of length of stay, length of ventilation, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), computed tomography classification, duration of speech pathology intervention, supplemental feeding duration, duration until initiation of oral intake (DIOF), duration to total oral intake (DTOF), and period of time from the initiation of intake until achievement of total oral intake (DI-TOF). (3) Significant predictive factors for dysphagia included GCS < 8.5 and a ventilation period in excess of 1.5 days., Conclusion: The provision of incidence data and predictive factors for dysphagia will enable clinicians in acute care settings to allocate resources necessary to deal with the predicted number of dysphagia cases in a pediatric population, and assist in predicting patients who are at risk for dysphagia following TBI. Early detection of patients with swallowing dysfunction will be aided by these data, in turn helping to facilitate effective medical and speech pathology intervention via assisting the reduction of medical complications such as aspiration pneumonia.
- Published
- 2003
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