Return to search

Pilot studies to develop and evaluate a muscle srengthening programme to reduce the risk of aspiration and improve outcome in stroke patients

Stroke can impair cough function. Respiratory muscle training (RMT) was investigated as an intervention for improving cough function in acute stroke; and as a potential strategy for preventing aspiration-related post-stroke pneumonia. Measures of cough function (volitional tests of cough flow and respiratory muscle strength, automated cough frequency measurement) required validation in the acute stroke population. Test-retest reliability was equally high in eleven healthy volunteers and six stroke survivors (ICCs >0.90). Minimal detectable difference was ≈7%. A calibrated pneumotachograph was found most appropriate for cough flow assessments, due to inaccuracy of portable flow meters (Bland-Altman 95% limits of agreement spanning ≈150 L/min). Automated cough frequency measurements (Leicester Cough Monitor) showed high accuracy (ICC >0.99). The effectiveness of RMT was investigated in a single-blind randomised placebo-controlled trial of 82 acute stroke survivors in three parallel groups (inspiratory, expiratory, and sham training). Mean group changes from baseline (SEM), respectively, were: 91 (42), 49 (27) and 84 (34) L/min for peak voluntary cough flow (p=0.46); -4 (28), 17 (19) and 32 (18) L/min for peak reflex cough flow (p=0.41); 20 (4), 12 (3) and 12 (4) cmH2O for maximal expiratory mouth pressure (p=0.35); and 18 (4), 10 (3) and 14 (3) cmH2O for maximal inspiratory mouth pressure (p=0.40). Pneumonia occurred in 13 (16%) participants with no difference between groups (p=0.65). Higher voluntary cough flow at baseline predicted lower pneumonia risk in patients with unsafe swallow (OR 0.73, 95%CI 0.51-0.95, p=0.012), but not in patients with safe swallow. In a sub-group of 21 patients, 24-hour cough frequency was abnormally high at baseline (median (range) 118 (4, 375)) and decreased to 56 (1, 186) at four weeks and 34 (6, 108) at twelve weeks (p=0.0003). RMT did not improve cough flow or respiratory muscle strength beyond natural recovery. Stronger cough was protective from aspiration-related post-stroke pneumonia.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:677196
Date January 2015
CreatorsKulnik, Stefan Tino
ContributorsKalra, Lalit
PublisherKing's College London (University of London)
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/pilot-studies-to-develop-and-evaluate-a-muscle-srengthening-programme-to-reduce-the-risk-of-aspiration-and-improve-outcome-in-stroke-patients(3e917f5c-153f-4fcd-94ae-709331d8ba58).html

Page generated in 0.0025 seconds