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usually not severe enough to require non-oral feeding
Dysphagia in Parkinson's Disease
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Dysphagia in PD
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severity
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Map Branches
management
holistic considerations
PD features:
depression
Cognitive impairment
Medication on/off cycles
assessments
clinical bedside
VF
FEES
CA
treatment approach
mainly compensatory strategies
body posture/head position
liaise with
PT
OT
consistency adaptation advice
liaise with
dietician
most nutritional and safest for swallowing consistencies
oral stage disorder:
hard consistencies likely difficult
assess impact individually
thickened fluids necessary?
alter bolus size
sensory stimulation
pharyngeal swallow delay
El Sharkawi et al 2002
MDT/dietitian liason
food and fluid intake
limiting factors
fatigue
Poor concentration
slowness
small high calorie snacks appropriate?
+ cognitive impairment:
verbal timely oral routine for swallow
thermochemical stimulation
ice cold citrus drink
traditionally viewed to assist in triggering swallow
Hamdy et al 2003: (stroke pts and normals)
time/swallow
ability to control slower bolus?
sip capacity
risk of valleculae residue overspill?
c/o food sticking in pharynx
alter head position
alternate solids/liquids
clear remaining residue post solid swallows
medication
No PD meds in syrup form
controlled release tablets
crushing
Dispersable Madopar
dissolved and thickened
if severe dysphagia
NG with Dispersable Madopar
Apomorphine injection
UK approved 1993
same effect as levodopa but avoidance of on/off cycling
agonist to LD side effects
low incidence neuro-psych problems
Paraenteral delivery
infusion
injection
Expensive:
underused
research ongoing
medication delivery methods
alert carers:
signs of aspiration
emergency procedure for choking
food pocketing likelihood
oral hygiene issues
regular dental apts needed
medications causing mouth dryness
safe feeding techniques (if PT unable to feed self)
Pts dependent on others for feeding
aspiration risk
Langmore et al 1998
give:
accurate, individualised advice:
feeding
Swallowing
verbal
written
direct therapy
LSVT improves swallowing
El Sharkawi et al 2002
51% in VF observed swallowing motility disorders
neuromuscular control
overflow: increased effort
saliva management
therapeutic
head and body positioning
verbal/electronic reminders to swallow
fluid intake if drooling causes excessive fluid 
liaise with:
dietician
Patient and carers
Pharmacological
Hyosine patch
SE's in older people:
hallucination
Confusion
sublingual atropine
effective
Occasional SEs
easy and inexpensive
Botulinum toxin
for ++ severe cases
wears off over few months
repeated injections
SE: toxin spreads into pharyngeal MM.
swallowing difficulty
Surgical
excision/rerouting
not preferred option in older, later stage PD
QOL impact
drooling: often late stage feature
most pts have this to some degree
Embarrassment / frustration
Prevelance
 95% of PD sufferers
Logemann et al 1975
severity
still significant feature of condition
manage
assess
usually not severe enough to require non-oral feeding
presentation
VF shows motility disorders in all swallow stages (Logemann 1988)
oesophageal
phayrngeal
aspiration
silent aspiration
laryngeal elevation/closure
delayed swallow trigger
oral
disturbed lingual movements
ROM/coordination
ant-post bolus movement
bolus control
chewing
tongue based retraction
causes erratic tablet absorption
response to
residue in valleculae
impact on saliva control
rocking/pumping tongue motion
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