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1.
Arq Gastroenterol ; 60(2): 194-200, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37556745

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Diets with modified consistencies for patients with dysphagia in long term care health institutions may be associated with malnutrition. OBJECTIVE: : To assess the nutritional status of adult patients with cerebral palsy and dysphagia hospitalized in a health institution for more than 10 years. METHODS: : This prospective investigation was performed in 56 patients with cerebral palsy (ages 25 to 71 years, mean: 44±12 years) and no other neurological diagnosis in hospital stay for more than 10 years had their nutritional status, dysphagia, and food ingestion capacity assessed in two moments with a 12-month interval in between them, respectively using the body mass index, the dysphagia risk assessment protocol (PARD), and the functional oral ingestion scale (FOIS). RESULTS: : There were no differences between December 2015 and December 2016 in the patients' weight, nutritional status, diet consistency classification, PARD, and FOIS. The limits of prescribed diet consistency (IDDSI-FDS) and the assessments of dysphagia and functional eating level influenced the nutritional status. More intense dysphagia and greater eating restrictions were associated with a worse nutritional status. CONCLUSION: : The nutritional status of adult patients with cerebral palsy hospitalized in a health long term institution who had modified diets according to their swallowing and mastication capacity did not worsen between assessments with a 12-month interval in between them. The severity of dysphagia and diet restrictions interfere with the patients' nutritional status: dysphagia and more intense eating restrictions are associated with a worse nutritional status.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Palsy , Deglutition Disorders , Humans , Adult , Nutritional Status , Deglutition Disorders/etiology , Eating , Cerebral Palsy/complications , Prospective Studies
2.
Arq. gastroenterol ; 60(2): 194-200, Apr.-June 2023. tab
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1447390

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT Background: Diets with modified consistencies for patients with dysphagia in long term care health institutions may be associated with malnutrition. Objective : To assess the nutritional status of adult patients with cerebral palsy and dysphagia hospitalized in a health institution for more than 10 years. Methods : This prospective investigation was performed in 56 patients with cerebral palsy (ages 25 to 71 years, mean: 44±12 years) and no other neurological diagnosis in hospital stay for more than 10 years had their nutritional status, dysphagia, and food ingestion capacity assessed in two moments with a 12-month interval in between them, respectively using the body mass index, the dysphagia risk assessment protocol (PARD), and the functional oral ingestion scale (FOIS). Results : There were no differences between December 2015 and December 2016 in the patients' weight, nutritional status, diet consistency classification, PARD, and FOIS. The limits of prescribed diet consistency (IDDSI-FDS) and the assessments of dysphagia and functional eating level influenced the nutritional status. More intense dysphagia and greater eating restrictions were associated with a worse nutritional status. Conclusion : The nutritional status of adult patients with cerebral palsy hospitalized in a health long term institution who had modified diets according to their swallowing and mastication capacity did not worsen between assessments with a 12-month interval in between them. The severity of dysphagia and diet restrictions interfere with the patients' nutritional status: dysphagia and more intense eating restrictions are associated with a worse nutritional status.


RESUMO Contexto: Dieta com consistência modificada para pacientes com disfagia internados em instituições por longa permanência pode causar desnutrição. Objetivo : Avaliar o estado nutricional de pacientes adultos com paralisia cerebral (PC) e disfagia internados em instituição de saúde por mais de dez anos. Métodos : É um estudo prospectivo realizado em 56 pacientes com PC com idades entre 25 e 71 anos, média: 44±12 anos. O estado nutricional, a disfagia e a capacidade de ingestão alimentar foram avaliados em dois momentos, separados por 12 meses, respectivamente pelo índice de massa corporal (IMC), protocolo de avaliação do risco de disfagia (PARD) e pela escala funcional de ingestão por via oral (FOIS), em 56 pacientes com PC internados em instituição hospitalar por mais de 10 anos, sem outro diagnóstico neurológico. Resultados : Não houve diferenças, entre dezembro de 2015 e dezembro de 2016, nas avaliações do peso, do estado nutricional, na classificação da consistência da dieta ingerida, na escala PARD para disfagia e na escala FOIS de avaliação de ingestão por via oral. Houve influência dos limites da consistência da dieta prescrita (IDDSI-FDS), da avaliação da disfagia e do nível funcional da alimentação no estado nutricional. Disfagia mais intensa e maior restrição alimentar foram associadas com pior estado nutricional. Conclusão : Em pacientes adultos com PC, avaliados com intervalo de 12 meses, não houve piora do estado nutricional. A intensidade da disfagia e as restrições alimentares são fatores que interferem no estado nutricional dos pacientes, disfagia e restrições alimentares mais intensas associadas com pior estado nutricional.


HIGLIGHTS •Diets with modified consistencies may cause malnutrition. •Patients with dysphagia in long term health institutions should ingest the prescribed amount of food to avoid malnutrition. •In patients with cerebral palsy with more intense dysphagia and greater eat restrictions are associated with the worse nutritional status. •The nutritional status of patients with cerebral palsy and dysphagia do not always worsen between assessments with 12-month interval.

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