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Resumen de Dysphagia in Old-Old Women: Prevalence as Determined According to Self-Report and the 3-Ounce Water Swallowing Test

Marlís González Fernández, Ianessa Humbert, Heather Winegrad, Anne R. Cappola, Linda P. Fried

  • Objectives: To determine whether symptoms and clinical signs of swallowing dysfunction could be easily identified in community-dwelling elderly adults and to examine the association between self-report and direct observation of symptoms and signs of swallowing dysfunction.

    Design: Physiological substudy conducted as a home visit within an observational cohort study.

    Setting: Baltimore City and County, Maryland.

    Participants: Community-dwelling elderly women without history of dysphagia or neurological disease aged 85 to 94 enrolled in the Women's Health and Aging Study II (N = 47).

    Measurements: Three trials of the 3-ounce water swallowing test, swallowing function questionnaire, and frailty status.

    Results: Thirty-four (72%) subjects demonstrated swallowing dysfunction in at least one swallowing trial and 16 (34%) in all three trials. The most common signs of dysfunction were throat clear and wet voice. Conversely, participants reported few symptoms of dysphagia on a swallowing function questionnaire. The most common symptom, reported by approximately 15% of participants, was the sensation of the food going �down the wrong way,� 8.5% or fewer participants reported other symptoms.

    Conclusion: Signs of swallowing dysfunction were present in a large majority of community-dwelling old-old women, but they were largely unrecognized and reported. Formal evaluation of swallowing function in community-dwelling elderly adults is necessary to determine the clinical consequences of these findings.


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