Introduction: Dysphagia is common after acute ischemic stroke and entails considerable morbidity and mortality. Here, we investigated the impact of intensified care on swallowing recovery after stroke.
Patients and methods: In this secondary analysis of STROKE-CARD, a randomized intervention trial of intensified post-stroke care, dysphagia was assessed by speech therapists at admission for acute ischemic stroke, at hospital discharge, and after 12-months. Patients randomized to STROKE-CARD care additionally received a detailed dysphagia follow-up at 3-months, including a standardized dysphagia examination, instructions on further exercises and compensation mechanisms and, if necessary, referral for further speech therapy.
Results: Dysphagia was present initially after stroke in 236 (16.6%; median age 82 (73-88), 44.1% female) of 1419 patients, with similar prevalence in both study groups at hospital admission (p = 0.239) and discharge (p = 0.870). At follow up, 14 (9.5%) of 147 in the intervention group and 18 (20.2%) of 89 in the control group suffered from persistent dysphagia (p = 0.020). There was better dysphagia recovery in the intervention group also under multivariable adjustment for age, sex, functional disability at 12-months, severe dysphagia at hospitalization, mode of feeding, cognitive impairment, thrombolysis, and stroke localization (odds ratio, 0.41, 95% confidence interval: 0.17 to 0.96).
Discussion and conclusion: Intensified post-stroke care improved dysphagia recovery within 1 year after acute ischemic stroke, highlighting the potential of targeted interventions for enhancing stroke outcomes.
Keywords: Dysphagia; intensified care; ischemic stroke; recovery.