英文摘要 |
Dysphagia is defined as difficulty in food passage from mouth through pharynx to stomach, which might result from functional, structural deficits or psychological causes. It is commonly found in dementia, stroke, head and neck surgery, Parkinson’s disease, muscular atrophy, and aging patients. The symptoms includes coughing, drooling of saliva, foods needed to be swallowed several times, and difficult swallowing. Furthermore, dysphagia could induce aspiration, dehydration or malnutrition. Due to tongue and oropharyngeal muscle weakness, hard solid or fibrous foods could not be masticated effectively to form suitable swallowable bolus. Insufficient saliva production enhances dryness of oropharyngeal area and difficulty of swallowing sticky foods. Therefore, The most important points of preparing foods for dysphagia are (1) choosing proper food texture, (2) according to stages of dysphagia, adjusting food particle size, hardness, moisture and thickness. In order to improve risk of patient's dehydration and malnutrition, preparing foods with small volume and high nutrient density is the first priority and adding natural or commercial thickeners to liquified foods to avoid of choking during liquid supplementation. |