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PubMed
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Stroke Interventions in Clinical Trials
Printable Version
A Comparison of an Implanted Neuroprosthesis With Sensory Training for Improving Airway Protection in Chronic Dysphagia



Principal Investigator
Christy L. Ludlow, Ph.D.

PI Address
Christy L. Ludlow, Ph.D., CCC-SPL, BC-ANCDS
Professor, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders,
Director, Laboratory on Neural Bases of Communication and Swallowing,
PhD Coordinator
James Madison University
HHS 1141, MSC 4304
Harrisonburg, VA 22807
Phone 540-568-3876
Fax 540-568-8077
email: ludlowcx@jmu.edu
personal webpage: http://www.csd.jmu.edu/people/ludlow.html
Lab webpage: http://www.csd.jmu.edu/labs/neuralbases.html

Contact Email
ludlowcx@jmu.edu

Sponsor



Trial Phase:Phase II
Study Size Planned:60
Centers Actual:1
Centers Planned:1
Max Age:90
Min Age:18
Follow-up Duration:24 Months
ISRCTN#NCT00376506
Status:
We just finished one year follow-up information on patients in September 2009 and are currently analyzing the results. Hope to have publication available in 6 months (March, 2010).

Purpose:
To determine if an implanted neuroprosthesis improves airway protection for swallowing in chronic pharyngeal dysphagia to a greater degree than sensory training.

Interventions:
Neurostimulation System for Dysphagia
a computer controlled system for automatic adjustment of neurostimulation implants

Location(s):
Maryland

Year Started: 2006
Year Finished: 2009

Design:
Interventional, Treatment, Randomized, Single Blind, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study.

Inclusion Criteria
History of cerebral vascular accident (CVA), brain injury or chronic neurological disease such as Parkinson disease or multiple sclerosis; evidence of pharyngeal phase dysphagia that places the patient at risk for aspiration (Risk for aspiration or frank aspiration will be based on the medical history and evidence from a swallowing study); duration of dysphagia for 6 months or more; score of 2 or greater on the NIH Swallowing Safety Scale; restricted oral intake; patients should demonstrate a current dependence on alternate means of nutrition and hydration (PEG, PEJ); however, PO intake is not cause for exclusion; adequate cognitive skills as demonstrated by a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score greater than or equal to 23; stable medical status (to determine if a patient has stable medical status prior to admission, the patient will be asked to provide a letter from their physician stating that the patient is medically stable and may participate in the study).

Exclusion Criteria
Subjects with Severe or Very Severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder (COPD); HIV positive or immune compromised; patients with a pacemaker, deep brain stimulator or other indwelling electrical device; history of rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disorders, such as progressive supranuclear palsy, dementia, peripheral neuropathy, multiple systems atrophy or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; severe oral phase swallowing deficits, due to loss of tongue control, that prevent bolus retention in the oral cavity; no aspiration or risk for aspiration in previous assessment or during preliminary studies; esophageal motility disorder preventing food or liquid from adequately moving through the esophagus into the stomach;
pregnant women will be excluded from participation because the study involves radiation exposure; current psychiatric disorder other than depression; inability to coordinate button press with swallow (as determined during screening).

Patient Involvement:
Subjects will have random assignment between two treatment groups with blinded assessment of treatment outcome. Both treatment groups will undergo 2 weeks of device training with a speech pathologist. The implant group will undergo training starting 3 weeks after implantation. They will receive prescriptive training when the levels of muscles stimulation will be established for swallowing. Patients will be trained to press a switch to control the stimulation while they are swallowing. The sensory training group will receive the same amount of training to provide sensory stimulation coincident with attempting to swallow. Blinded assessment of risk of aspiration on videofluoroscopy using the NIH Swallowing Safety Scale, and patient administration of the Functional Oral Intake Scale (FOIS) for Dysphagia and the Swallowing Quality of Life Outcomes Tool (SWAL_QOL) prior to treatment and at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months following treatment.

Primary Outcome:
Swallowing safety for 10 ml of thin liquid and 5 ml of pudding with and without stimulation.

Secondary Outcome:
Quality of Life Patient Questionnaire.

Source of Information:
ClinicalTrials.gov

Web Links and Publications:
Initial psychometric assessment of a functional oral intake scale for dysphagia in stroke patients.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2005 Aug;86(8):1516-20

The SWAL-QOL outcomes tool for oropharyngeal dysphagia in adults: I. Conceptual foundation and item development.
Dysphagia 2000 Summer;15(3):115-21

Impaired deglutitive airway protection: a videofluoroscopic analysis of severity and mechanism.
Gastroenterology 1997 Nov;113(5):1457-64

A Comparison of an Implanted Neuroprosthesis With Sensory Training for Improving Airway Protection in Chronic Dysphagia
ClinicalTrials.gov

This information last updated on: 10/26/2009

Reviewed on: 10/26/2009.

UID: 861

   

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