Hospital Medicine Unplugged delivers evidence-based updates for hospitalists—no fluff, just the facts. Each 30-minute episode breaks down the latest guidelines, clinical pearls, and practical strategies for inpatient care. From antibiotics to risk stratification, radiology to discharge planning, you’ll get streamlined insights you can apply on the wards today. Perfect for busy physicians who want clarity, accuracy, and relevance in hospital medicine.
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Hospital Medicine Unplugged delivers evidence-based updates for hospitalists—no fluff, just the facts. Each 30-minute episode breaks down the latest guidelines, clinical pearls, and practical strategies for inpatient care. From antibiotics to risk stratification, radiology to discharge planning, you’ll get streamlined insights you can apply on the wards today. Perfect for busy physicians who want clarity, accuracy, and relevance in hospital medicine.
The Hospitalist's Guide to Dysphagia: Stroke, ICU, and the Stepwise Guide to Diagnosis and Management in Hospital Medicine
Hospital Medicine Unplugged
34 minutes
1 month ago
The Hospitalist's Guide to Dysphagia: Stroke, ICU, and the Stepwise Guide to Diagnosis and Management in Hospital Medicine
In this episode of Hospital Medicine Unplugged, we tackle hospital-acquired dysphagia—spot it early, screen systematically, intervene fast—to cut pneumonia, malnutrition, and mortality.
We start with the big drivers: critical illness, intubation/mechanical ventilation, tracheostomy, prolonged stay, and neuro disease (esp. acute stroke). In the ICU, post-extubation dysphagia (PED) hits ~12–26%—higher after emergency admits, severe illness, and long ventilation or RRT. Mechanisms stack up: airway trauma, impaired sensorium, neuromuscular/ICU-acquired weakness. On the wards, stroke leads the pack (up to 78%), and older adults/dementia carry heavy risk and consequences.
Why it matters: aspiration pneumonia, malnutrition/dehydration, longer LOS, higher costs, and higher mortality. Dysphagia is under-recognized and under-screened—especially after extubation.
How we find it—screen, then scope:• Universal nurse-led screening before PO in stroke and after extubation in ICU. Fail = NPO + SLP.• Bedside tools (e.g., Yale, GUSS, TOR-BSST) flag risk but miss silent aspiration.• Instrumental testing when unclear or high-risk: VFSS (gold standard) or FEES (bedside, repeatable).• Separate oropharyngeal vs esophageal patterns: initiate EGD/barium/manometry when transport symptoms dominate.
Management—protect the lungs, feed the patient, train the swallow:• NPO until safe plan; upright 30–45°, slow assisted feeding, small sips/bites.• SLP-led strategies: posture (e.g., chin tuck), pacing, exercises; reassess after any neuro change.• Diet texture & liquids per IDDSI—individualize thickened liquids (benefit ≠ universal; watch hydration).• Early enteral nutrition (NG/PEG) if unsafe or inadequate PO.• Oral care bundle to lower pneumonia risk.• Medication hygiene: limit sedatives/anticholinergics/opioids that blunt swallow or sensorium.• ICU specifics: routine PED screen post-extubation, cuff management, early mobility, and wean plans; avoid reflex “regular diet” orders after tube removal.• Stroke specifics: screen before first sip, rapid SLP + VFSS/FEES as needed, start rehab early, and adapt as deficits evolve.• Elderly/dementia: simplify mealtime environment, cueing, hydration prompts, goals-of-care; monitor for silent aspiration.• Esophageal causes: treat the cause—PPI/EoE diet, endoscopic dilation/oncologic workup, or motility therapy—while maintaining safe intake.
Red flags for higher-level care: recurrent coughing/wet voice, oxygen dips with PO, recurrent pneumonia, failure of bedside screen, bulbar weakness, or new neuro deficits.
Quality & safety pearls:• Screen everyone at risk, every time (stroke, post-extubation, neuro, frail).• Don’t “test with a tray.” A failed screen mandates NPO + SLP.• Instrumental confirmation guides targeted therapy and prevents over- or under-restriction.• Track hydration & calories—thickened liquids can quietly dehydrate patients.• Build order sets that auto-trigger SLP, dietitian, oral care, and aspiration precautions.
We close with the Dysphagia Bundle that sticks:(1) Screen before PO (stroke/post-extubation/elderly/neuro).(2) Failed screen → NPO + SLP + VFSS/FEES pathway.(3) IDDSI diet + compensatory maneuvers with education at bedside.(4) Oral care, hydration checks, and med de-sedation.(5) Escalate to GI (EGD/esophagram/manometry) when esophageal features present.(6) Reassess after status changes; step-up/step-down diet based on data.(7) Discharge plan: home exercises, texture guidance, and follow-up SLP.
Bottom line: screen early, instrument wisely, individualize diets, and rehabilitate relentlessly. That’s how you make dysphagia safer in the hospital—and keep aspiration off your problem list.
Hospital Medicine Unplugged
Hospital Medicine Unplugged delivers evidence-based updates for hospitalists—no fluff, just the facts. Each 30-minute episode breaks down the latest guidelines, clinical pearls, and practical strategies for inpatient care. From antibiotics to risk stratification, radiology to discharge planning, you’ll get streamlined insights you can apply on the wards today. Perfect for busy physicians who want clarity, accuracy, and relevance in hospital medicine.