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Published in: Dysphagia 1/2010

01-03-2010 | Original Article

Confirmation of No Causal Relationship Between Tracheotomy and Aspiration Status: A Direct Replication Study

Authors: Steven B. Leder, Douglas A. Ross

Published in: Dysphagia | Issue 1/2010

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Abstract

Debate continues regarding an association between tracheotomy and aspiration status. The aim of this research was to perform a direct replication study to investigate further the causal relationship, if any, between tracheotomy and aspiration. Twenty-five consecutive adult hospitalized patients participated. Inclusion criteria were a pretracheotomy dysphagia evaluation, subsequent tracheotomy and tracheotomy tube placement, then a post-tracheotomy dysphagia reevaluation prior to decannulation. Twenty-two (88%) participants exhibited the same aspiration status or resolved aspiration pre- versus post-tracheotomy. Three participants exhibited new aspiration post-tracheotomy due to worsening medical conditions. Conversely, four participants exhibited resolved aspiration post-tracheotomy due to improved medical conditions. Excluding these seven participants, all nine participants who aspirated pretracheotomy also aspirated post-tracheotomy and all nine participants who did not aspirate pretracheotomy also did not aspirate post-tracheotomy (P > 0.05). No statistically significant differences were found between aspiration status and days since tracheotomy (χ 2 = 0.08, P > 0.05) or between age and aspiration status (P > 0.05). The absence of a causal relationship between tracheotomy and aspiration status was confirmed.
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Metadata
Title
Confirmation of No Causal Relationship Between Tracheotomy and Aspiration Status: A Direct Replication Study
Authors
Steven B. Leder
Douglas A. Ross
Publication date
01-03-2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Dysphagia / Issue 1/2010
Print ISSN: 0179-051X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0460
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00455-009-9226-z

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