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Drugs Aging ; 40(10): 895-907, 2023 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37707775

RESUMO

Dysphagia is increasingly common in older adults; it is especially prevalent in long-term care settings. Patients with dysphagia likely require pharmacologic treatment for multiple comorbidities but may find it difficult or impossible to swallow oral medications. Administering crushed medications mixed with a soft food or liquid vehicle, or via a feeding tube, is a common strategy to circumvent swallowing difficulties in patients with dysphagia. However, inappropriate medication use and improper crushing technique can reduce the medication dose a patient receives, alter medication pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, and compromise treatment efficacy and patient safety. Clinical judgment is needed to identify medications that can and cannot be crushed, select a crushing methodology and vehicle for administering crushed medications, and create a strategy for administering multiple medications. A coordinated effort from the entire care team-including physicians, pharmacists, nurses, advanced practice providers, speech therapists, patients, and caregivers-is necessary to develop and implement an individualized plan for administering medications to patients with dysphagia. This review details the current literature regarding the administration of medications that have been altered, such as by crushing tablets or opening capsules, for patients with dysphagia or who are receiving enteral feeding and provides recommendations on best practices.


Dysphagia, or difficulty swallowing, is common in hospitals and in places that provide long-term care. People who live at home may also have a hard time swallowing pills. In this review, we talk about how people who have a hard time swallowing pills can best take their medicines. A speech-language pathologist can help people with dysphagia find ways to eat and drink safely. Their healthcare provider and pharmacist should make sure all their medicines are needed and check if any of their medicines come in a form that does not need to be swallowed, like a patch. It is sometimes okay to take a medicine by crushing a pill and then mixing with food. However, some medicines may be dangerous or less effective if they are crushed or mixed with some foods. Mixing multiple crushed medicines may also be unsafe or make them less effective. People in hospitals and long-term care settings who have a hard time swallowing pills should have an individual plan in place for taking medicines. Physicians, pharmacists, speech-language pathologists, and front-line care staff should work with patients and caregivers to make the plan. The plan should be written down in their patient record. People who have a hard time swallowing medicines should talk to their doctor or pharmacist about how best to take their medicines. People should not alter their medicines without talking to a healthcare professional.


Assuntos
Transtornos de Deglutição , Nutrição Enteral , Humanos , Idoso , Transtornos de Deglutição/tratamento farmacológico , Pacientes , Assistência de Longa Duração , Segurança do Paciente
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