Background and purpose: Stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP) affects 10 to 38% of patients in the acute phase of stroke. Stroke patients diagnosed with dysphagia have an 11-fold higher risk of developing SAP. Thus, identifying dysphagic patients through a highly accurate screening tool might be crucial in reducing the incidence of SAP. We present a case–control study designed to evaluate efficacy in reducing the risk of SAP between two swallowing screening tools, the classic water swallow test (WST) and a recently validated tool such as the GLOBE-3S (the Sapienza GLObal Bedside Evaluation of Swallowing after Stroke), which is a highly sensitive swallowing screening tool particularly accurate in detecting silent aspiration as well. Methods: We analyzed the occurrence of dysphagia in 100 acute stroke patients distributed in two groups: half were screened with WST and the other half with GLOBE-3S. Results: Dysphagia was diagnosed in 28 patients. The main result is that, among patients who passed the dysphagia screenings, none of those screened with the GLOBE-3S method developed pneumonia compared to 31.82% in the WST group. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) showed that NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score and the dysphagia screening method (i.e., GLOBE-3S vs. WST) were the two main factors in the SAP’s predicting model and the only significant ones per se. Conclusions: The new GLOBE-3S screening test can reduce the risk of SAP compared to WST.

The role of the Sapienza GLObal bedside evaluation of swallowing after stroke (GLOBE-3S) in the prevention of stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP) / Jannini, T. B.; Ruggiero, M.; Viganò, A.; Comanducci, A.; Maestrini, I.; Giuliani, G.; Vicenzini, E.; Fattapposta, F.; Pauri, F.; Ruoppolo, G.; Toscano, M.; Di Piero, V.. - In: NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES. - ISSN 1590-1874. - (2021). [10.1007/s10072-021-05449-y]

The role of the Sapienza GLObal bedside evaluation of swallowing after stroke (GLOBE-3S) in the prevention of stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP)

Ruggiero M.
Secondo
;
Comanducci A.;Maestrini I.;Giuliani G.;Vicenzini E.;Fattapposta F.;Pauri F.;Ruoppolo G.;Toscano M.
Penultimo
;
Di Piero V.
Ultimo
2021

Abstract

Background and purpose: Stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP) affects 10 to 38% of patients in the acute phase of stroke. Stroke patients diagnosed with dysphagia have an 11-fold higher risk of developing SAP. Thus, identifying dysphagic patients through a highly accurate screening tool might be crucial in reducing the incidence of SAP. We present a case–control study designed to evaluate efficacy in reducing the risk of SAP between two swallowing screening tools, the classic water swallow test (WST) and a recently validated tool such as the GLOBE-3S (the Sapienza GLObal Bedside Evaluation of Swallowing after Stroke), which is a highly sensitive swallowing screening tool particularly accurate in detecting silent aspiration as well. Methods: We analyzed the occurrence of dysphagia in 100 acute stroke patients distributed in two groups: half were screened with WST and the other half with GLOBE-3S. Results: Dysphagia was diagnosed in 28 patients. The main result is that, among patients who passed the dysphagia screenings, none of those screened with the GLOBE-3S method developed pneumonia compared to 31.82% in the WST group. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) showed that NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score and the dysphagia screening method (i.e., GLOBE-3S vs. WST) were the two main factors in the SAP’s predicting model and the only significant ones per se. Conclusions: The new GLOBE-3S screening test can reduce the risk of SAP compared to WST.
2021
acute stroke; dysphagia; GLOBE-3S; silent aspiration; stroke-associated pneumonia
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
The role of the Sapienza GLObal bedside evaluation of swallowing after stroke (GLOBE-3S) in the prevention of stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP) / Jannini, T. B.; Ruggiero, M.; Viganò, A.; Comanducci, A.; Maestrini, I.; Giuliani, G.; Vicenzini, E.; Fattapposta, F.; Pauri, F.; Ruoppolo, G.; Toscano, M.; Di Piero, V.. - In: NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES. - ISSN 1590-1874. - (2021). [10.1007/s10072-021-05449-y]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1583193
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