Management of swallowing disorders in ICU patients - A multinational expert opinion

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Management of swallowing disorders in ICU patients - A multinational expert opinion. / Likar, Rudolf; Aroyo, Ilia; Bangert, Katrin; Degen, Björn; Dziewas, Rainer; Galvan, Oliver; Grundschober, Michaela Trapl; Köstenberger, Markus; Muhle, Paul; Schefold, Joerg C; Zuercher, Patrick.

in: J CRIT CARE, Jahrgang 79, 02.2024, S. 154447.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ReviewForschung

Harvard

Likar, R, Aroyo, I, Bangert, K, Degen, B, Dziewas, R, Galvan, O, Grundschober, MT, Köstenberger, M, Muhle, P, Schefold, JC & Zuercher, P 2024, 'Management of swallowing disorders in ICU patients - A multinational expert opinion', J CRIT CARE, Jg. 79, S. 154447. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrc.2023.154447

APA

Likar, R., Aroyo, I., Bangert, K., Degen, B., Dziewas, R., Galvan, O., Grundschober, M. T., Köstenberger, M., Muhle, P., Schefold, J. C., & Zuercher, P. (2024). Management of swallowing disorders in ICU patients - A multinational expert opinion. J CRIT CARE, 79, 154447. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrc.2023.154447

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{780d1c053b604ed58a611b71a1e1b5b8,
title = "Management of swallowing disorders in ICU patients - A multinational expert opinion",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Dysphagia is common in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, yet it remains underrecognized and often unmanaged despite being associated with life-threatening complications, prolonged ICU stays and hospitalization.PURPOSE: To propose an expert opinion for the diagnosis and management of dysphagia developed from evidence-based clinical recommendations and practitioner insights.METHODS: A multinational group of dysphagia and critical care experts conducted a literature review using a modified ACCORD methodology. Based on a fusion of the available evidence and the panel's clinical experience, an expert opinion on best practice management was developed.RESULTS: The panel recommends adopting clinical algorithms intended to promote standardized, high-quality care that triggers timely systematic dysphagia screening, assessment, and treatment of extubated and tracheostomized patients in the ICU.CONCLUSIONS: Given the lack of robust scientific evidence, two clinical management algorithms are proposed for use by multidisciplinary teams to improve early systematic detection and effective management of dysphagia in ICU patients. Additionally, emerging therapeutic options such as neurostimulation have the potential to improve the quality of ICU dysphagia care.",
author = "Rudolf Likar and Ilia Aroyo and Katrin Bangert and Bj{\"o}rn Degen and Rainer Dziewas and Oliver Galvan and Grundschober, {Michaela Trapl} and Markus K{\"o}stenberger and Paul Muhle and Schefold, {Joerg C} and Patrick Zuercher",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1016/j.jcrc.2023.154447",
language = "English",
volume = "79",
pages = "154447",
journal = "J CRIT CARE",
issn = "0883-9441",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Management of swallowing disorders in ICU patients - A multinational expert opinion

AU - Likar, Rudolf

AU - Aroyo, Ilia

AU - Bangert, Katrin

AU - Degen, Björn

AU - Dziewas, Rainer

AU - Galvan, Oliver

AU - Grundschober, Michaela Trapl

AU - Köstenberger, Markus

AU - Muhle, Paul

AU - Schefold, Joerg C

AU - Zuercher, Patrick

N1 - Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.

PY - 2024/2

Y1 - 2024/2

N2 - BACKGROUND: Dysphagia is common in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, yet it remains underrecognized and often unmanaged despite being associated with life-threatening complications, prolonged ICU stays and hospitalization.PURPOSE: To propose an expert opinion for the diagnosis and management of dysphagia developed from evidence-based clinical recommendations and practitioner insights.METHODS: A multinational group of dysphagia and critical care experts conducted a literature review using a modified ACCORD methodology. Based on a fusion of the available evidence and the panel's clinical experience, an expert opinion on best practice management was developed.RESULTS: The panel recommends adopting clinical algorithms intended to promote standardized, high-quality care that triggers timely systematic dysphagia screening, assessment, and treatment of extubated and tracheostomized patients in the ICU.CONCLUSIONS: Given the lack of robust scientific evidence, two clinical management algorithms are proposed for use by multidisciplinary teams to improve early systematic detection and effective management of dysphagia in ICU patients. Additionally, emerging therapeutic options such as neurostimulation have the potential to improve the quality of ICU dysphagia care.

AB - BACKGROUND: Dysphagia is common in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, yet it remains underrecognized and often unmanaged despite being associated with life-threatening complications, prolonged ICU stays and hospitalization.PURPOSE: To propose an expert opinion for the diagnosis and management of dysphagia developed from evidence-based clinical recommendations and practitioner insights.METHODS: A multinational group of dysphagia and critical care experts conducted a literature review using a modified ACCORD methodology. Based on a fusion of the available evidence and the panel's clinical experience, an expert opinion on best practice management was developed.RESULTS: The panel recommends adopting clinical algorithms intended to promote standardized, high-quality care that triggers timely systematic dysphagia screening, assessment, and treatment of extubated and tracheostomized patients in the ICU.CONCLUSIONS: Given the lack of robust scientific evidence, two clinical management algorithms are proposed for use by multidisciplinary teams to improve early systematic detection and effective management of dysphagia in ICU patients. Additionally, emerging therapeutic options such as neurostimulation have the potential to improve the quality of ICU dysphagia care.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jcrc.2023.154447

DO - 10.1016/j.jcrc.2023.154447

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 37924574

VL - 79

SP - 154447

JO - J CRIT CARE

JF - J CRIT CARE

SN - 0883-9441

ER -