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      Successful treatment of pill-swallowing difficulties with head posture practice

      , , , , ,
      Paediatrics & Child Health
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Abstract

          Clinics often encounter neurologically intact patients who are unable to swallow pills. All of the interventions published previously have used traditional behavioural techniques, which are time consuming and often not helpful. To determine whether children who had never been able to swallow a whole pill could become successful as a result of an intervention based on head posture. A novel intervention was developed based on published research showing that changing head position alters swallowing dynamics. The method was developed in two studies of 240 adults and children, pilot tested in a study of 108 university students with very mild pill-swallowing discomfort, and then evaluated in a study of 41 children who had never successfully swallowed a pill in spite of much instruction and coaxing. Children were recruited from a tertiary paediatric hospital: 34 were clinic patients, four were their siblings or friends, and three were children of hospital staff. The primary intervention involved teaching five head positions (centre, up, down, left and right) followed by a two-week period of daily practice. EIGHT CHILDREN (ALL CLINIC REFERRALS) WITHDREW WITHOUT PRACTICING: four were too ill to practice (primarily due to sedation or nausea) and four simply refused to do the homework practice. All 33 of the children who were able and willing to practice daily were successful. Practice with head posture variations was successful in treating pill-swallowing difficulties in all 33 children who practiced for 14 days. A training video can be viewed at www.ucalgary.ca/research4kids/pillswallowing.

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          Most cited references9

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          Neurophysiology of swallowing.

          Swallowing is a complex motor event that is difficult to investigate in man by neurophysiological experiments. For this reason, the characteristics of the brain stem pathways have been studied in experimental animals. However, the sequential and orderly activation of the swallowing muscles with the monitoring of the laryngeal excursion can be recorded during deglutition. Although influenced by the sensory and cortical inputs, the sequential muscle activation does not alter from the perioral muscles caudally to the cricopharyngeal sphincter muscle. This is one evidence for the existence of the central pattern generator for human swallowing. The brain stem swallowing network includes the nucleus tractus solitarius and nucleus ambiguus with the reticular formation linking synaptically to cranial motoneuron pools bilaterally. Under normal function, the brain stem swallowing network receives descending inputs from the cerebral cortex. The cortex may trigger deglutition and modulate the brain stem sequential activity. The voluntarily initiated pharyngeal swallow involves several cortical and subcortical pathways. The interactions of regions above the brain stem and the brain stem swallowing network is, at present, not fully understood, particularly in humans. Functional neuroimaging methods were recently introduced into the human swallowing research. It has been shown that volitional swallowing is represented in the multiple cortical regions bilaterally but asymmetrically. Cortical organisation of swallowing can be continuously changed by the continual modulatory ascending sensory input with descending motor output. Dysphagia is a severe symptom complex that can be life threatening in a considerable number of patients. Three-fourths of oropharyngeal dysphagia is caused by neurological diseases. Thus, the responsibility of the clinical neurologist and neurophysiologist in the care for the dysphagic patients is twofold. First, we should be more acquainted with the physiology of swallowing and its disorders, in order to care for the dysphagic patients successfully. Second, we need to evaluate the dysphagic problems objectively using practical electromyography methods for the patients' management. Cortical and subcortical functional imaging studies are also important to accumulate more data in order to get more information and in turn to develop new and effective treatment strategies for dysphagic patients.
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            Effects of postural change on aspiration in head and neck surgical patients.

            This study was designed to define the effects of postural change on liquid aspiration during videofluorographic examination of oropharyngeal swallow in head and neck surgical patients. Thirty-two patients were given two swallows of five different amounts of liquid barium as tolerated. When aspiration occurred, the patient's head and/or body position was changed, new posture being determined by the swallowing disorder identified as the cause of the aspiration. Postural techniques were successful in eliminating aspiration on at least one volume of liquid in 81% of these patients. Patients in all surgical groups were able to use postures with equal success. A variety of positions were used in each type of surgical patient, indicating that these patients exhibited a variety of swallowing problems. Results emphasize the importance of introducing postural techniques during the radiographic study of oropharyngeal swallow to facilitate safe oral intake of liquids.
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              Efficacy of a pill-swallowing training intervention to improve antiretroviral medication adherence in pediatric patients with HIV/AIDS.

              We aimed to retrospectively assess the efficacy of pill-swallowing training provided as a clinical intervention to referred pediatric patients with HIV in relation to improved adherence and subsequent related health outcomes. The primary goal of this study was to demonstrate participation in pill-swallowing training is associated with improved medication adherence as documented by routine pharmacy pill counts. Secondary objectives were to assess corresponding improvements in clinically observed biologic indicators of adherence, specifically, immunologic functioning (CD4+ T-cell%) and viral load, over time. A retrospective chart review of 23 pediatric patients with HIV aged 4 to 21 years who were clinically referred for pill-swallowing training by an experienced pediatric psychologist for either noted difficulties with currently prescribed antiretroviral regimens and/or desire to change the child's regimen/formulary. Patient demographics, reason(s) for pill-swallowing training referral, number of pill-swallowing training sessions required to attain success, adherence, CD4+ T-cell%, and viral load were abstracted at baseline and at approximately 3 and 6 months posttraining. Modal number of sessions required to acquire the pill-swallowing skill was 1 session. Younger children (aged 4-5 years) required a median of 2 training sessions, while older children required > or = 3 sessions. A significant improvement in adherence from baseline to 6 months post-pill-swallowing training completion was observed, as were significant related improvements in CD4+ T-cell% and viral load. Participation in pill-swallowing training related to improved medication adherence at 6 months posttraining. Subsequent improvements in related CD4+ T-cell% and viral load were noted over time, most significantly at 6 months postintervention. These preliminary findings provide justification for additional study via a prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial. Pill-swallowing training potentially is a successful time-limited, cost-effective intervention to improve adherence to antiretroviral therapies, and thus medical status, in children with HIV.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Paediatrics & Child Health
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1205-7088
                1918-1485
                May 2010
                May 01 2010
                May 2010
                May 01 2010
                : 15
                : 5
                : e1-e5
                Article
                10.1093/pch/15.5.e1
                2912624
                21532781
                a38fa028-3836-47ad-8ff8-4757c3802c93
                © 2010
                History

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