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Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the evidence confirm our suspicions?
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Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Apr 01, 2015

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Page 1: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Adult Swallowing EBP Group

Extravaganza Presentation 2009In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship

between oral hygiene and pneumonia?

Does the evidence confirm our suspicions?

Page 2: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Who are we?

The adult swallowing EBP Group comprises of both metropolitan and rural members.

We are practicing Speech Pathologists with a particular interest in the management of adult swallowing impairments.

Page 3: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Forming our Clinical Question…

Areas of interest…

Oral Hygiene

Tongue Strengthening exercises

Page 4: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Signs of poor oral hygiene

Plaque and debrisDevelopment of infections in the mouth

such as mouth ulcersDental cariesLoss of teethPain and discomfort in the mouthAltered taste

Page 5: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Signs of poor oral hygiene

Dry mouthFissures of the tongue Inability to wear denturesPeriodontal diseaseHalitosis

(Rieger et al 2005; Roberts 2000)

Page 6: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

What are our suspicions?

For those of you who work in the area of dysphagia please raise your hand if you include oral care as part of your swallowing recommendations.

Why do we do this?What is it that we suspect?We suspect that there is a relationship between

oral hygiene and pneumonia in patients with dysphagia.

Page 7: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Flow chart of pneumonia Flow chart of pneumonia developmentdevelopment

Dysphagia & pneumonia: a complex relationship (Langmore 1998)

Colonisation (altered oropharyngeal flora):

Aspiration into lungs

Host resistance

Pneumonia

Page 8: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Clinical Question

In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and

pneumonia?

Page 9: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Searching for Evidence

Search terms: Oral hygiene, Pneumonia, Aspiration pneumonia, Dysphagia, Swallowing, Mouth Care, Oral Care.

Databases: Medline, Embase, CIAP, PsychINFO, CINAHL and Science direct

Other resources Google Scholar, reference lists of other articles/texts.

Area Librarians.

Page 10: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Critically Appraised Papers

Over 120 articles initially identified 65 were actually accessible17 initially thought to be relevant3 articles deemed relevant during formation of CAT

Page 11: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Quagliarello, V., Ginter, S., Han, L., Van Ness, P., Allore. H., & Tinetti, M. (2005). Modifiable risk factors for nursing home-acquiredpneumonia. Clinical Infectious Diseases, Vol 40 pp: 1-6

Level of Evidence: IVProspective study;613 nursing home residents over the

age of 65 underwent surveillance for 12 months post enrolment in the study, or until an end point was reached (i.e. diagnosis of pneumonia or exclusionary event).

Page 12: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Results: Quagliarello et al

16% of pneumonia cases could have been prevented if adequate oral care had occurred.

5% of pneumonia cases could have been prevented if swallowing difficulty had not occurred.

In patients with > two risk factors at baseline,35% of pneumonia cases may have been prevented if adequate dental care occurred. 38% of pneumonia cases may have been prevented if swallowing difficulty had not occurred

21% of pneumonia in the entire cohort could have been prevented if inadequate oral care and swallowing difficulties had not occurred.

Page 13: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Clinical Bottom Line: Quagliarello et al

Oral hygiene and swallowing difficulties were identified as two modifiable risk factors that could prevent development of nursing home acquired pneumonia.

Patients do not need these risk factors to occur simultaneously for pneumonia to develop.

Management of oral hygiene and swallowing difficulties may reduce the risk of pneumonia.

Page 14: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Langmore, S, E. Terpenning, M, S. Schork, A. Chen, Y. Murray, J. T. Lopatin, D, Loesche, W. J. (1998) Predictors of Aspiration Pneumonia: How important is Dysphagia? Dysphagia Vol 13 pp: 69-81

Level of evidence: III.2Prospective outcomes study design; 160 males >60yrs,

diagnoses of CVA, other neurological conditions, gastrointestinal disease, diabetes, COPD, congestive heart failure. Subjects were followed for four years for an outcome of aspiration pneumonia.

All participants underwent; clinical and fluoroscopic examination, dental exam and scintigraphy examination on an annual basis. Half of the participants also underwent FEES if indicated

Medical & functional status was also collected.

Page 15: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Results: Langmore et al

81% of all subjects with aspiration pneumonia had oropharyngeal dysphagia, 58% aspirated liquid, 27% aspirated food and 50 % aspirated their own secretions.

o 46% of patients with nil dentition (edentulous) also developed pneumonia.

o 16% Bed bound patients developed pneumonia, o 43% patients with reduced activity levels developed

pneumonia.o 41% of patients dependent upon other to feed them

developed aspiration pneumonia.

Page 16: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Clinical Bottom Line: Langmore et al

Aspiration pneumonia can not be attributed to a single causal factor; it is the result of a variety of predictors experienced in conjunction.

Dysphagia and aspiration are necessary factors but the most significant predictors were; dependence for feeding and oral hygiene, number of decayed teeth, enteral feeding, co- morbidities, quantity of medications, and smoking.

Page 17: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Ferozali F, Johnson G & Cavagnaro A. Health Benefits and Reductions in Bacteria from Enhanced Oral Care. Special Care in Dentistry 27: 5, 2007.

Level of evidence: II Randomised control study: 36 subjects, ages 31-79. Subjects

followed for 90 days. Participants had one or more of the following inclusion criteria,

enteral feeding, hiatal hernia, emesis, GORD or swallowing difficulties.

Participants were divided into 3 groups; group1 underwent oral cleansing with suctioning, group 2 underwent teeth cleaning with sodium bicarbonate, group 3 was the control with no additional intervention received.

Oral health was evaluated 3 times during the study using a simplified Beck Oral Assessment tool. Condition of the lips, oral mucosa, gingival tissue and plaque was scored by the Dental Hygienist who was blinded to group membership.

Page 18: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Results: Ferozali et al

All groups demonstrated reductions in number of hospitalisation days for respiratory infections

Reducing the level of bacteria in the mouth likely reduces the risk of infection and upper respiratory tract illness.

The majority of potentially pathogenic bacteria was detected in the mouths of subjects receiving PEG feeds when compared to overall group.

Suctioning in collaboration with oral care is beneficial

Page 19: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Clinical bottom line: Ferozali et al

Oral care combined with intermittent suctioning may reduce respiratory infections for long term care residents with multiple risk factors including swallowing difficulties that place them at high risk of aspiration pneumonia.

Page 20: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Strengths in the evidence:

Langmore, et al Overview of literature Use of gold standard tool in the confirmation of the presence of aspiration

Quagliarello et al The modifiable risk factors were comprehensively assessed. The pneumonia

outcome definition was rigorous and included radiographic evidence. Use of intra observer reliability testing of both modifiable risk factor assessment

and pneumonia outcome detection. Evaluating the fraction of cases of pneumonia that could have been prevented by

modifying each risk factor

Ferozali et al Random assignment of subjects Inclusion of microbiologists and dental hygienists.

Page 21: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Limitations in the evidence:

Langmore et al Nil specific documentation of whether fluids were modified Small subject sample Subjects are only male veterans.

Quagliarello et al Only using lack of dental examination as the definition of inadequate oral care. The use of cough during swallow as the definition of swallowing difficulty ignores

patients who silently aspirate oropharyngeal contents. Only baseline assessment of modifiable risk factors. No measures of external validity. Paper focused on nursing home acquired pneumonia Nil comparison of modifiable risk factors amongst participants who did and did

not develop pneumonia.

Ferozali et al Number of patients with or without dysphagia were not identified. short duration and small sample size of study. Oral care still undertaken in control group.

Page 22: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Clinical Implications

Oral hygiene and dysphagia are risk factors that can be attributed to the development of pneumonia, if we can manage or minimise these risk factors the risk of developing pneumonia can be reduced.

“Therefore clinicians managing patients with dysphagia need to look beyond their traditional therapy approaches of changing posture, training swallowing manoeuvres and altering diet and consider more indirect approaches such as training family members, nurses and volunteers who feed patients in providing good oral care and facilitating dental treatment for patients with dental disease” (Langmore et al 1998).

Page 23: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

CAT 2: Progress Report

We have also been busy working on a second CAT this year.

Do tongue strengthening exercises effect the impaired oropharyngeal swallow?

So far… 60 articles evaluated 10 relevant articles found so far CAPs to get underway early 2010

Watch this space!!

Page 24: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Where to next year?

Completion of CAT 2Free Water Protocol?The ageing swallow?

Page 25: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

QUESTIONS

Page 26: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

Contacts

Please feel free to contact us if you would like to join the group: Christine Button [email protected] Jessica Newman [email protected] Anna Corry [email protected] (until the end of 2009)

Please contact us if you are interested in

co-leading the groupRefer to the EBP website for more details about

the group.

Page 27: Adult Swallowing EBP Group Extravaganza Presentation 2009 In patients with dysphagia is there a relationship between oral hygiene and pneumonia? Does the.

References

Ferozali F, Johnson G & Cavagnaro A. Health Benefits and Reductions in Bacteria from Enhanced Oral Care. Special Care in Dentistry 27: 5, 2007.

Langmore, S, E. Terpenning, M, S. Schork, A. Chen, Y. Murray, J. T. Lopatin, D, Loesche, W. J. (1998) Predictors of Aspiration Pneumonia: How important is Dysphagia? Dysphagia Vol 13 pp: 69-81

Quagliarello, V., Ginter, S., Han, L., Van Ness, P., Allore. H., & Tinetti, M. (2005). Modifiable risk factors for nursing home-acquired pneumonia. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 40, 1-6.

Rieger, J., Seikaly, H., Jha, N., Harris, J., Williams, D., Liu, R., McGraw, T. & Wolfaardt, J. (2005). Submandibular Gland Transfer for Prevention of Xerostomia After Radiation Therapy. Archives of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, 131, 140-145.

Roberts, J. (2000). Developing an oral assessment and intervention tool for older people: 1. British Journal of Nursing, 9(17), 11241127.