Purpose: to describe the speech therapy aspects of patients treated by the palliative care team in a hospital. Methods: an observational and cross-sectional study, performed from medical records of patients treated under Palliative Care Program, in a hospital, from July to September 2018. Information from the anamnesis and speech-language assessments, which were analyzed by frequency measures, were collected. Results: the sample was composed by 41 medical records, including 25 males and 16 females, with an average age of 61.2 years and hospitalization average time of 20.7 days. Oral feeding was present in 73% of the sample. It was observed that 24% of the patients had impaired expressive language, 56% had reduced maximum phonation times and 34% showed altered mobility phonoarticulatory organs. For swallowing, 22% showed difficulty in some consistency. A nutritional feeding was verified in 74% of the sample and the remaining was making use of comfort feeding. In relation to assistance, 46% of the sample was under management, 7% in therapy, and the remaining did not have follow-up indication. Conclusion: relevant alterations to orofacial motricity, voice, language and swallowing were found in patients under palliative care.
Objective: To verify the effectiveness of a Brief and Intensive Dysphagia Therapy programme, in patients with head and neck cancer, during radio-chemotherapy. Study Design: This is a randomized clinical trial - pilot project with a random sample consisting of 11 patients divided into two groups: 7 in the intervention group, who received brief and intensive therapy and 4 in the control group, with weekly therapy. The assessment instruments used were tongue pressure measurement, mouth-opening measures, oral intake scale and quality of life questionnaire. Patients were evaluated before radio-chemotherapy, after 15 days of speech therapy and after radio-chemotherapy. Results: The intervention group presented higher values of lingual apex pressure (p = 0.00), mouth opening maintenance from the second evaluation (35.14 ± 16.82 mm) until the end of the radio-chemotherapy (35.29 p± 5.93 mm), greater oral intake functionality (p = 0.00) and improvement in overall aspects of quality of life questionnaire (p = 0.05) after completion of brief and intensive therapy and radio-chemotherapy. Conclusion: Brief and intensive therapy presented superior results in the maintenance and/or rehabilitation of the swallowing mechanism in patients with head and neck cancer undergoing radio-chemotherapy.
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