The role of laryngeal hypersensitivity in dysphagia: A scoping review with embedded stakeholder involvement.

IF 1.5 3区 医学 Q2 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1111/1460-6984.13085
Sophie Chalmers, Fiona Gillies, Sarah Wallace
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Knowledge user engagement highlights a lack of clarity around diagnosis and investigative approaches, limited clinical guidance and inconsistent practice, which leads to inequity in service delivery and care.</p><p><strong>Aim: </strong>To identify and present the published literature regarding the definitions and clinical identification tools used during the management of laryngeal hypersensitivity related dysphagia.</p><p><strong>Methods & procedures: </strong>A scoping review was conducted following Joanna Briggs Institute methodology and EQUATOR PRISMA-ScR guidance. Patient and stakeholder engagement was embedded at each review stage. The protocol was registered with the Open Science Framework: DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/CUXYN. A multidatabase search strategy identified literature published between 2012 and 2022. A narrative description was used to report the study findings.</p><p><strong>Outcomes & results: </strong>The search identified 2590 citations. The full paper screening was completed on 88 studies, with 17 studies included in data extraction. There was a wide range of terminology and assessment approaches which varied across different clinical settings. The most cited term was 'muscle tension dysphagia'. The most common assessments tools were videofluoroscopy, fibreoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing and videostroboscopy, predominantly used in speech and language therapy and/or Ear, Nose and Throat settings. Gastroesophageal and respiratory investigations were less frequently cited.</p><p><strong>Main contribution: </strong>This review details the current evidence related to the terminology and assessment tools cited in laryngeal hypersensitivity related dysphagia to improve clinician knowledge and understanding. Patient and stakeholder involvement indicated that future research needs to: optimize consensus of terminology, and improve consistent identification methods, service provision and treatment approaches.</p><p><strong>Conclusions & implications: </strong>This review highlights the lack of consistent terminology across the literature. A wide range of assessment tools report nonspecific positive clinical features and a lack of significant instrumental assessment findings. Patients and stakeholders identify the research priorities should improve clinician awareness, knowledge, guidance and evidence to support patient care.</p><p><strong>What this paper adds: </strong>What is already known on the subject Swallowing difficulties can occur in adults for a number of different reasons, such as neurological, respiratory or physiological conditions. Swallowing difficulties with no evidence of biomechanical or structural impairment on instrumental assessment and of unknown cause (termed idiopathic functional dysphagia or medically unexplained dysphagia) is a poorly understood phenomenon. More recently, concurrent oropharyngeal dysphagia and laryngeal hypersensitivity and/or muscle tension have been posited as a potential underlying mechanism. What this study adds to the existing knowledge This scoping review contributes to our expanding knowledge of the role of laryngeal hypersensitivity in dysphagia by providing an overview of the current evidence related to the terminology and assessment tools reported in the literature. Embedded patient and stakeholder involvement further deepens real-world insights into the increased referrals for these individuals with increasing uncertainty in how to best assess, manage and support patients. Patients equally have reported that reduced professional awareness and inequalities in service delivery pathways result in poor patient experience and quality of life, and healthcare economic burden. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? This scoping review draws our attention to an area of practice which has received little attention in both clinical practice and academic research. First, the study raises awareness of this population and the impact for services, speech and language therapists and clinicians; and second, highlights evidence-practice gaps with seldom consistency in the use of terminology and assessment approaches. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Based on stakeholder conversations, speech and language therapists have anecdotally observed cases of dysphagia with suspected laryngeal hypersensitivity. These presentations have been coined as 'muscle tension dysphagia' often with concurrent laryngeal sensitivity symptoms. However, the role of laryngeal hypersensitivity in dysphagia is not fully understood. Knowledge user engagement highlights a lack of clarity around diagnosis and investigative approaches, limited clinical guidance and inconsistent practice, which leads to inequity in service delivery and care.

Aim: To identify and present the published literature regarding the definitions and clinical identification tools used during the management of laryngeal hypersensitivity related dysphagia.

Methods & procedures: A scoping review was conducted following Joanna Briggs Institute methodology and EQUATOR PRISMA-ScR guidance. Patient and stakeholder engagement was embedded at each review stage. The protocol was registered with the Open Science Framework: DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/CUXYN. A multidatabase search strategy identified literature published between 2012 and 2022. A narrative description was used to report the study findings.

Outcomes & results: The search identified 2590 citations. The full paper screening was completed on 88 studies, with 17 studies included in data extraction. There was a wide range of terminology and assessment approaches which varied across different clinical settings. The most cited term was 'muscle tension dysphagia'. The most common assessments tools were videofluoroscopy, fibreoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing and videostroboscopy, predominantly used in speech and language therapy and/or Ear, Nose and Throat settings. Gastroesophageal and respiratory investigations were less frequently cited.

Main contribution: This review details the current evidence related to the terminology and assessment tools cited in laryngeal hypersensitivity related dysphagia to improve clinician knowledge and understanding. Patient and stakeholder involvement indicated that future research needs to: optimize consensus of terminology, and improve consistent identification methods, service provision and treatment approaches.

Conclusions & implications: This review highlights the lack of consistent terminology across the literature. A wide range of assessment tools report nonspecific positive clinical features and a lack of significant instrumental assessment findings. Patients and stakeholders identify the research priorities should improve clinician awareness, knowledge, guidance and evidence to support patient care.

What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject Swallowing difficulties can occur in adults for a number of different reasons, such as neurological, respiratory or physiological conditions. Swallowing difficulties with no evidence of biomechanical or structural impairment on instrumental assessment and of unknown cause (termed idiopathic functional dysphagia or medically unexplained dysphagia) is a poorly understood phenomenon. More recently, concurrent oropharyngeal dysphagia and laryngeal hypersensitivity and/or muscle tension have been posited as a potential underlying mechanism. What this study adds to the existing knowledge This scoping review contributes to our expanding knowledge of the role of laryngeal hypersensitivity in dysphagia by providing an overview of the current evidence related to the terminology and assessment tools reported in the literature. Embedded patient and stakeholder involvement further deepens real-world insights into the increased referrals for these individuals with increasing uncertainty in how to best assess, manage and support patients. Patients equally have reported that reduced professional awareness and inequalities in service delivery pathways result in poor patient experience and quality of life, and healthcare economic burden. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? This scoping review draws our attention to an area of practice which has received little attention in both clinical practice and academic research. First, the study raises awareness of this population and the impact for services, speech and language therapists and clinicians; and second, highlights evidence-practice gaps with seldom consistency in the use of terminology and assessment approaches. The study provides priority research themes to expand our knowledge and understanding, as guided by the literature and patient and stakeholder input.

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喉过敏症在吞咽困难中的作用:利益相关者参与的范围界定综述。
背景:根据利益相关者的谈话,言语和语言治疗师观察到一些吞咽困难的病例,并怀疑是喉敏感症。这些病例被称为 "肌肉紧张性吞咽困难",通常同时伴有喉敏感症状。然而,人们对喉过敏在吞咽困难中的作用尚未完全了解。知识使用者的参与凸显了诊断和调查方法的不明确性、临床指导的有限性以及实践的不一致性,这导致了服务提供和护理的不公平。目的:确定并介绍已发表的文献,这些文献涉及喉过敏症相关吞咽困难管理过程中使用的定义和临床识别工具:按照乔安娜-布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)的方法和 EQUATOR PRISMA-ScR 指南进行了范围界定综述。患者和利益相关者的参与贯穿于每个综述阶段。该方案已在开放科学框架下注册:doi 10.17605/osf.io/cuxyn。多数据库检索策略确定了 2012 年至 2022 年间发表的文献。研究结果采用叙述性描述:搜索共发现 2590 篇引文。对 88 项研究完成了完整的论文筛选,其中 17 项研究纳入了数据提取。在不同的临床环境中,术语和评估方法各不相同。引用最多的术语是 "肌肉紧张性吞咽困难"。最常见的评估工具是视频荧光镜、纤维内窥镜吞咽评估和视频咽喉镜,主要用于言语治疗和/或耳鼻喉科。胃食管和呼吸系统检查较少被引用:本综述详细介绍了与喉过敏相关的吞咽困难的术语和评估工具相关的现有证据,以提高临床医生的知识水平和理解能力。患者和利益相关者的参与表明,未来的研究需要:优化术语共识,改进一致的识别方法、服务提供和治疗方法:本综述强调了文献中缺乏一致的术语。各种评估工具报告了非特异性的阳性临床特征,但缺乏重要的工具性评估结果。患者和利益相关者确定的研究重点应提高临床医生的认识、知识、指导和证据,以支持患者护理:关于该主题的已知信息 成人出现吞咽困难的原因多种多样,如神经、呼吸或生理疾病。吞咽困难在器械评估中没有生物力学或结构损伤的证据,且原因不明(称为特发性功能性吞咽困难或医学上无法解释的吞咽困难),这是一种不甚明了的现象。最近,有人认为并发口咽吞咽困难和喉过敏和/或肌肉紧张是一种潜在的潜在机制。本研究对现有知识的补充 本范围界定综述概述了与文献中报道的术语和评估工具相关的现有证据,有助于我们进一步了解喉过敏症在吞咽困难中的作用。患者和利益相关者的参与进一步加深了我们对现实世界的了解,即这些人的转诊率越来越高,而如何对患者进行最佳评估、管理和支持却越来越不确定。患者同样报告说,专业意识的降低和服务提供途径的不平等导致了患者体验和生活质量的下降以及医疗保健经济负担的加重。这项工作有哪些潜在或实际的临床影响?本范围界定综述提请我们注意临床实践和学术研究中都很少关注的实践领域。首先,该研究提高了人们对这一人群的认识,以及对服务、言语和语言治疗师及临床医生的影响;其次,该研究强调了证据与实践之间的差距,即术语和评估方法的使用很少保持一致。本研究以文献、患者和利益相关者的意见为指导,提出了优先研究主题,以扩展我们的知识和理解。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
116
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders (IJLCD) is the official journal of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists. The Journal welcomes submissions on all aspects of speech, language, communication disorders and speech and language therapy. It provides a forum for the exchange of information and discussion of issues of clinical or theoretical relevance in the above areas.
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