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Title: Factors affecting return to oral intake in inpatient rehabilitation after acquired brain injury. Author: Kjaersgaard A, Nielsen LH, Sjölund BH. Journal: Brain Inj; 2015; 29(9):1094-104. PubMed ID: 25996468. Abstract: PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: To extend previous observations by investigating if differences exist in time to initiation or to recovery of total oral intake in patients with acquired brain injury assessed by either Facial-Oral Tract Therapy (F.O.T.T.) or Fibreoptic Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing (FEES) and to investigate whether other factors influence these outcomes. RESEARCH DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. METHODS: One hundred and nineteen patients with dysphagia in inpatient neurorehabilitation were randomized. The main outcome was time to maximum on the Functional Oral Intake Scale. RESULTS: There was no difference in time to initiation or recovery of total oral intake using F.O.T.T. or FEES. Oral intake was initiated for 42% on admission and 92% at discharge; 2.5% of the patients were on total oral intake within 24 hours of admission and 37% at discharge. The likelihood of recovery to total oral intake before discharge was found to depend on age, Functional Independence Measure score, length of stay and number of dysphagia interventions. CONCLUSION: There was no significant difference in time to initiation and recovery of total oral intake before discharge, whether assessed by F.O.T.T. or FEES, indicating that an instrumental assessment is unnecessary for standard evaluation. Age, functional independence and length of stay had a significant influence.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]