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Cancer: Oropharyngeal Cancer
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Total 3 results found since Jan 2013.

The effect of voice training interventions on patients with oropharyngeal dysphagia: a systematic review
CONCLUSIONS: In general, statistically significant positive therapy effects were found. Voice training improves the oral and pharyngeal stages of swallowing in patients with neurological causes of dysphagia, such as stroke, and in patients with non-neurological causes of dysphagia, such as head and neck cancer. However, the current literature is limited and further primary research is required to provide more evidence to support voice training intervention in dysphagia. Future studies could further refine the content of voice training interventions, increase the number of patients enrolled, assess the long-term effects of ...
Source: Cancer Control - November 7, 2022 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Chunyan Niu Wenyan Zhou Haifang Wang Yingying Zhang Jianzheng Cai Nini Lu Yalan Wang Source Type: research

Safety and performance of oropharyngeal muscle strength training in the treatment of post-stroke dysphagia during oral feeding: protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis
Introduction Dysphagia is a common functional disorder after stroke. Most patients post-stroke are incapable of oral feeding, which often leads to complications such as malnutrition, aspiration pneumonia and dehydration that seriously affect the quality of life of patients. Oropharyngeal muscle strength training is a major method of swallowing training, and recent studies have focused on healthy adults, elderly persons, and patients with head and neck cancer or neurodegenerative diseases; but there have been few studies on such training in patients with post-stroke dysphagia. Our study aims to systematically review the saf...
Source: BMJ Open - June 15, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Gao, M., Wang, Y., Xu, L., Wang, X., Wang, H., Song, J., Yang, X., Zhou, F. Tags: Open access, Neurology Source Type: research