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Clinical Evaluation of Dysphagia in SchoolAged Children

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Title: Clinical Evaluation of Dysphagia in SchoolAged Children


1
Clinical Evaluation of Dysphagia in School-Aged
Children
  • Kelly Dailey Hall, Ph.D. CCC/SLP
  • Pediatric Speech Language Services, Inc.
  • Greensboro, NC
  • kdhall2_at_uncg.edu

2
Swallowing/Feeding Disorders is educationally
relevant
  • Students must be safe while eating at school
  • Students must be adequately nourished/hydrated so
    they can attend fully to access the curriculum
  • Students must be healthy to maximize attendance
    at school
  • Students must develop skills for eating
    efficiently during meals/snack time so they can
    complete these activities with their peers safely
    and in a timely manner

3
  • SLPs do not need a medical prescription or
    medical approval to perform clinical evaluations
    or implement intervention services
  • We do have the responsibility to determine
    whether the students medical condition warrants
    medical clearance for clinical procedures.

Roles of speech-Language Pathologists in
Swallowing and Feeding Disorders, ASHA 2001a, b
4
Preschool/Elementary
  • identifying students with swallowing and feeding
    problems
  • determining the strategies to maintain the
    student's health and safety while eating/drinking
    in the school setting
  • facilitating developmental gains in swallowing
    and feeding skills

5
Middle/High School
  • improving the efficiency of the student's
    swallowing and feeding behaviors
  • generalizing swallowing and feeding skills for
    varied social purposes in a variety of settings.
  • responding to and minimizing regression

6
Incidence of Pediatric Dysphagia
  • 25 in all children
  • 80 in children with developmental disabilities
  • Occur with greater prevalence in children with
    physical disabilities, medical illness and
    prematurity
  • (Manikam Perman 2000)
  • Summarized in Oct. 2006 Brackett, Arvedson
    Manno in SID 13 newsletter

7
Where did it start?
  • Child who experience pain, nausea, fatigue
    associated with eating may develop
    refusal/aversive behaviors
  • Inadequate opportunities to develop/practice
    skills (i.e. tongue lateralization, chewing,
    swallowing)
  • Inadequate experience as an oral feeder reduces
    the probability that the child can or will eat in
    the future.

Piazza (2008)
8
Types of Feeding Problems
  • 1. Food Refusal
  • Refusal to eat all or most foods so the extent
    that the child fails to meet his/her nutritional
    needs
  • 2. Selectivity
  • Eating a narrow range of food that is
    nutritionally inappropriate
  • Refusal to eat food textures that are
    developmentally appropriate
  • 3. Oral Motor Problems
  • Difficulty with mastication, lip closure, tongue
    mvts
  • 4. Pharyngeal dysphagia
  • Aspiration

9
The Big Question?
  • Is the student at risk for aspiration?
  • Yes? Then you need to establish strategies for
    oral intake that minimizes the risk.
  • Most appropriate diet consistencies
    (e.g.thickening liquids)
  • Manuevers (e.g. chin tuck, double swallow)
  • Increase timing of swallow response
  • Increase strength of pharyngeal contractions
  • No? Then you need normalize feeding behavior.

10
What Are Parents/Teachers Reporting?
  • prolonged and/or stressful mealtimes
  • coughing and throat clearing when eating and
    drinking or from accumulation of saliva
  • wet breath sounds and/or gurgly voice quality
    associated with swallowing
  • spillage of food and liquid from the mouth
  • drooling
  • food remaining in mouth (pocketing) after
    swallowing
  • swallowing solid food without chewing
  • inability to drink from a cup
  • multiple swallows per bite of food or sip of
    liquid
  • effortful swallowing
  • gagging or vomiting associated with eating and
    drinking.

11
What Do You Find Out After Probing Further?
  • Food refusal-turns away, spits out food.
  • Extreme food selectivity-eats only a few foods or
    kinds of food.
  • Gastrostomy tube dependence
  • Accepts little or no food by mouth.
  • Behavioral problems related to mealtime crying,
    gagging, vomiting, throwing food.
  • Poor hydration/fluid intake-doesn't drink enough
    fluids
  • Poor intake of food leading to failure to thrive
  • Significant respiratory
  • Oral-motor problem-tactile defensiveness, gagging
  • Delay in the development of self-feeding skills.
  • Consistently missing 2 or more food groups
  • Feeding habits differ significantly from
    family/peers and affect social life (e.g. cant
    go to birthday parties)

12
Potential Students on Our Caseloads
  • Group 1
  • History of feeding/swallowing disorder with
    concomitant medical disorder
  • Previous VFSS and swallowing therapy by and SLP
    and/or OT
  • 70 of children whose pediatric
    feeding/swallowing issues are not resolved by age
    3 will have persistent feeding difficulties 4 to
    6 years later (that puts them on your caseload in
    the schools)

Piazza (2008)
13
Group 1
  • History of
  • GER
  • Prematurity
  • Short Bowel Syndrome
  • Autism
  • Developmental Delay
  • Prolonged tube feeding

14
Group 2
  • No previous feeding/swallowing intervention
  • History of picky eater
  • May or may not have a significant medical history

15
Need to determine the etiology
  • Behavioral
  • Sensory
  • Physiological
  • Combinations

16
Sensory Issues
  • Where do they come from?
  • Prematurity
  • Chronic illness
  • Multiple medical interventions/medications
  • Underlying neuro issues
  • Diagnosis with SI as a component
  • Unpleasant oral-tactile experiences
  • Delayed introduction of oral feeds
  • GI issues

17
Behavioral Issues
  • Where do they come from?
  • Bad habits/desperation
  • Poor limit setting
  • Lack of mealtime structure and routine
  • Passive eating with distractions
  • Inconsistent expectations re eating

18
Sensory Issues - Presentation
  • Often avoids whole foods or texture groups
  • Difficulty tolerating sensory input
    sight/smell/touch/taste
  • Eats the same regardless of people/place
  • Overstuffs oral cavity/takes tiny bites
  • Stores food for later
  • Gags as a sensory response
  • Excessive drooling

19
Behavioral Issues - Presentation
  • Rarely selective avoidance
  • Eats better for certain people/places
  • Gags to get attention
  • Rarely underlying neuro or medical issue

20
Other factors to consider
  • Adipsia
  • the absence of thirst or the desire to drink
  • Dysphagia can be a real or imagined difficulty in
    swallowing
  • phagophobia

21
  • Kasese-Hara (2002) research suggest that children
    with FTT lack the normal responses to hunger and
    satiety cues to regulate food intake.
  • Childen with feeding problems can be minimally or
    completely unaffected by hunger cues

22
Clinical Assessment of Feeding and Swallowing
  • History/Background
  • Oral Mechanism/CN exam
  • Swallowing Exam

23
Visual Evaluation of Structures
  • Lips
  • Teeth - dental status, dentures
  • Oral mucosa
  • Tongue
  • Palate, faucial arches
  • Neck (larynx)

24
Visual Evaluation of Structures
  • Relative size and symmetry
  • Abnormalities
  • scarring
  • atrophy
  • asymmetry
  • resting movement (fasciculation)

25
CN V (Trigeminal Mandibular Branch
26
Lips (CN VII)
  • retraction
  • rounding
  • Closure

27
Tongue (CN XII)
  • elevation (ant.)
  • lateralization
  • protrusion
  • retraction
  • elevation (post)

28
VP port (CN V,IX, X)
  • elevation
  • retraction
  • lateral wall mvt
  • posterior wall mvt

29
CN IX (Glossopharyngeal)
  • Look at your neighbor saying ah, ah, ah

30
Laryngeal Exam (CN X)
  • cough
  • voice quality
  • dry swallow (cervical auscultation)

31
Swallow Exam
  • Listen (cervical auscultation)to respiratory
    sounds at the level of the thyroid cartilage
  • Dry swallow (with CA)
  • Introduce 1iquids, small amount, via straw or
    spoon (with CA)
  • Continue with thick liquids, pudding, and soft
    solids

32
  • Feel for laryngeal elevation and posterior tongue
    mvt.
  • Check for timing of the swallow response

33
What are we looking for?
  • lip closure
  • tongue mvt
  • laryngeal elevation/hyoid elevation
  • timing of swallow response
  • Residue
  • Signs/symptoms of aspiration

34
What does CA tell us?
  • Cervical auscultation during oral intake of
    ________________ revealed changes in the
    respiratory sounds following the swallow which
    may be indicative of aspiration.

35
Intervention
  • Facilitative
  • Facilitate recovery to normal
  • Compensatory
  • Compensate for a disordered system

36
Compensatory
  • Positioning
  • Utensils
  • Maneuvers

Most students who require compensatory strategies
will have these strategies identified on their
MBSS. We implement a program to be sure that the
child is using these strategies to reduce
aspiration risk.
37
Compensatory/Manuevers
  • Chin Tuck
  • Supraglottic Swallow
  • Mendelsohn Maneuver
  • Effortful Swallow

38
Facilitative
  • 1. Oral Motor Exercises Lingual strengthening
  • Sensory stimulation to increase awareness
  • Increasing ROM
  • 2. Development of Normal Feeding Skills

39
Food Chaining
  • A systematic, child specific, home-based
    treatment program
  • Builds on successful eating experiences
  • One part of a comprehensive treatment program
  • Foods are used as desensitization
  • tools in treatment


40
  • Foods are selected based on the
  • childs preferences, this reduces
  • the risk of refusals
  • Currently accepted foods, rejected foods and
    previously accepted foods are analyzed for
    patterns in taste / texture / consistency
  • New food items are introduced that are very
    similar to foods /liquids in the core diet.
  • Chains can be simple or extremely complex.

41
Food Chaining helps the Therapist to determine
  • Core Diet Foods child eats on a regular basis,
    consistently accepted.
  • Patterns of Intake Grazing, excessive liquid
    intake, food jags, refusals.
  • Consistency of Intake With parent, in the home,
    extended family, at a restaurant, at school, with
    peersis there any difference?

42
  • Goal food items are selected that
  • have similar features (taste texture temperature)
    to those in the childs core diet (consistently
    accepted foods)
  • What Food to Select Next
  • Rating scales (1-10) are used weekly to measure
    reaction to new foods, measure change in
    preferences over time to help select next
    targeted food items.

43
How to Implement the Program
  • Parent implements the program at home under
    direction of the team. Feeding therapy continues
    at school.
  • Flavor Mapping involves analyzing the childs
    preferences. Are there patterns between favorite
    foods? Does the child seek strong or more bland
    flavor of food? What is the most common texture
    of food.

44
  • Transitional Foods involves using favorite foods
    between bites of new food to encourage the child
    and help mask after taste of a new food item.
  • Flavor Masking involves finding flavors that can
    be used on a variety of newer food items. Masking
    allows the child to experience a known accepted
    taste paired with the new food item. Masks are
    then faded as the child tolerates the targeted
    food items. (Example Ranch Dressing).

45
What is sensory integration?
  • Sensory pertains to our senses
  • Hearing, sight, smell, touch, taste, and
    perception of motion/movement and gravity
  • Integration refers to the process of unifying and
    allowing the brain to use the information that
    the senses gather and take into the body

46
Sensory-Based Feeding ProblemsNon-nutritive
Stimulation Protocol
  • Oral stimulation of the lips, teeth/gums, cheeks,
    tongue, and palate with Nuk brush
  • Develop tooth brushing protocol for therapy and
    home
  • Introduce mild tastes on finger, cloths, and
    brushes as tolerated

47
Sensory-Based Feeding Problems
  • Visual
  • Olfactory
  • Tactile
  • Gustatory

48
Food ExperiencesVisual
  • Non-mealtime visual experience
  • Object-based, picture-based system
  • Establish comfort level with food proximity
  • Work on tolerating food on the table, on the
    childs plate, etc.

49
Food ExperiencesOlfactory
  • Introduce mild smells
  • Establish comfort with proximity to smells
  • Handling directly
  • Presenting on another object
  • Increase intensity of smells
  • Scented therapy tools

50
Food ExperiencesTactile
  • Water play/Sensory bean bags
  • Painting with food
  • Food activities (i.e., flower pots, boats,
    gingerbread houses)
  • Cooking activities
  • Pizza, muffins, waffles, fruit salad, soup

51
Food ExperiencesGustatory
  • Hierarchical Approach (Toomey, 2000)
  • 1. Kissing
  • 2. Licking
  • 3. Bite and remove
  • 4. Bite, chew and spit
  • 5. Bite, chew, swallow
  • 6. Consider taste, temperature, texture
  • 7. Structure movement through hierarchy with an
    all done bowl

52
Treatment of Poor Hunger/Satiety
  • Guidelines for following normal mealtime schedule
    including 3 meals and 2-3 snacks daily
  • Pair tube feedings in high-chair/booster seat
    with or immediately after the oral feeding
  • Medication may aid in stimulating hunger

53
Management of Behaviorally-Based Feeding Problems
  • Rule-out medical, motor, or sensory involvement
  • Parent education
  • Promote ownership in older child
  • Referral to behavior specialist and/or
    psychologist/psychiatrist

54
Use of Reinforcement as a Part of Feeding Therapy
  • Use reinforcers to develop new skills
  • Age appropriate reinforcers including puppets,
    books, peg boards, card games
  • Natural reinforcers should be used at home
  • Homework sticker charts

55
  • Some Activities to Increase Oral Stimulation
  • Young children with feeding and swallowing issues
    related to a sensory disorder may benefit from
    stimulation activities that can be done at home
    by a caregiver at home or in a child care
    setting. Always consult with a speech-language
    pathologist or occupational therapist before
    embarking on a program to affect oral
    defensiveness.
  • Gentle massage with a NUK brush
  • Gentle massage with a small finger toothbrush
    brush
  • Offer a strong piece of sterile rubber tubing to
    practice biting and increase jaw strength
  • Offer foods of different textures pretzels,
    crackers, puddings, jell-o, ice cream, mashed
    potatoes, etc.
  • Offer drinks of different temperatures and
    composition
  • Offer gentle vibrating toys for facial massage or
    oral exploration
  • Gentle facial massage with different textures of
    cloth

56
  • Increase appropriate feeding behaviors.
  • Decrease inappropriate behaviors.
  • Motivate the child to demonstrate an existing
    behavior more frequently.

57
Food Rules for (Arvedson, 1998)
  • Maintain regular mealtimes
  • Meals last no longer than 30 minutes
  • No grazing.
  • Neutral feeding atmosphere
  • No game playing

58
  • Solids come first
  • Liquids come last
  • Remove food after 15 minutes if s/he is throwing
    it, playing with it or not eating it.
  • Dont wipe the childs hands or mouth until the
    meal is finished.

59
Getting Started
  • 1. Allow the child to watch others eat.
  • 2. Experience smells, tastes, and play with food.
  • 3. Mealtime should be fun/social.

60
  • Get MD approval to begin bolus feedings for
    exclusively tube fed children.
  • Oral motor therapy should be separate from
    mealtime.

61
Remember
  • The goal of all feeding therapy is a pleasurable
    experience associated with food. You must first
    determine if the problem is a motivation vs skill
    deficit.
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