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This concise guide contains recommendations extracted from the National clinical guideline for stroke, 3rd edition,1 which contains over 300 recommendations covering almost every aspect of stroke management.The recommendations below have direct implications for speech and language therapists and aim to provide them with ready access to the latest guidance. Recommendations are given below with their number, so that they can be found in the main guideline. Recommendations that are taken from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guideline2 have a background tint.
Resources (3.3.1)
Each stroke rehabilitation unit and service should be organised as a single team of staff with specialist knowledge and experience of stroke and neurological rehabilitation including:
consultant physician(s) nurses physiotherapists occupational therapists speech and language therapists dieticians clinical psychologists social workers.
have an education programme for all staff providing the stroke service offer training for junior professionals in the specialty of stroke.
train all staff in the recognition and management of emotional, communicative and cognitive problems.
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Any patient with left hemisphere cerebral damage should be screened for aphasia using a formal screening tool such as the Frenchay Aphasia Screening Test or Sheffield Aphasia Screening Test. Any patient found to have aphasia on screening or suspected to have it on clinical grounds should:
have a full formal assessment of language and communication by a speech and language therapist.
When a patient has been found to have aphasia, a speech and language therapist should:
explain the nature of the impairment to the patient, family and treating team establish the most appropriate method of communication and then inform (and if necessary train) the family and treating team re-assess the nature and severity of the loss at appropriate intervals.
Any patient with aphasia persisting for more than two weeks should:
be given treatment aimed at reducing identified specific language impairments while continuing to progress towards goals be considered for early intensive (28 hours/week) speech and language therapy if they can tolerate it
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within 24 hours of admission and not more than 72 hours afterwards. People with suspected aspiration on specialist assessment or who require tube feeding or dietary modification for three days should be: reassessed and considered for instrumental examination referred for dietary advice. People with acute stroke who are unable to take adequate nutrition and fluids orally should: receive tube feeding with a nasogastric tube within 24 hours of admission be considered for a nasal bridle tube or gastrostomy if they are unable to tolerate a nasogastric tube be referred to an appropriately trained healthcare professional for detailed nutritional assessment, individualised advice and monitoring. Nutrition support should be initiated for people with stroke who are at risk of malnutrition. This may include oral nutritional supplements, specialist dietary advice and/or tube feeding. All people with acute stroke should have their hydration assessed on admission, reviewed regularly and managed so that normal hydration is maintained. In people with dysphagia, food and fluids should be given in a form that can be swallowed without aspiration following specialist assessment of swallowing. Routine nutritional supplementation is not recommended for people with acute stroke who are adequately nourished on admission.
Depression (6.25.1)
B In people with aphasia and other impairments complicating assessment of mood, careful observations over time (including response to a trial of antidepressant medication if considered necessary) should be used.
be assessed for alternative means of communication (eg gesture, drawing, writing, use of communication aids) and taught how to use any that are effective.
all people interacting regularly with a person who has aphasia should be taught the most effective communication techniques for that person their mood should be assessed using whatever method seems most appropriate (eg direct questioning using adapted techniques, behavioural observation).
be considered for and if appropriate referred for a further episode of specific treatment (in a group setting or one-to-one) have their need and the need of their family for social support and stimulation assessed formally, and met if possible (eg by referral to voluntary sector groups). B
Dysarthria (6.37.1)
A Any patient whose speech is unclear or unintelligible so that communication is limited or unreliable should be assessed by a speech and language therapist to determine the nature and cause of the speech impairment. Any person who has dysarthria following stroke sufficiently severe to limit communication should:
receive hydration (and nutrition after 2448 hours) by alternative means be given their medication by the most appropriate route and in an appropriate form have a comprehensive assessment of their swallowing function undertaken by a speech and language therapist or other appropriately trained professional with specialism in dysphagia be considered for nasogastric tube feeding be considered for the additional use of a nasal bridle if the nasogastric tube needs frequent replacement have written guidance for all staff/carers to use when feeding or providing liquid.
be taught techniques to improve the clarity of their speech be assessed for compensatory alternative and augmentative communication aids (eg letter board, communication aids) if speech remains unintelligible. C
The communication partners (eg family, staff) of a person with severe dysarthria should be taught how to assist the person in their communication.
Patients with difficulties in swallowing their normal diet should be assessed by a speech and language therapist or other appropriately trained professional with specialism in dysphagia for active management of oral feeding by:
Royal College of Physicians, 2008. All rights reserved.
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sensory modification, such as altering taste and temperature of foods or carbonation of fluids texture modification of solids and/or liquids. I
restorative strategies to improve oropharyngeal motor function (eg Shaker head lifting exercises).
be referred to a dietician or multidisciplinary nutrition team have texture of modified food or liquids described using national agreed descriptors have fluid balance and nutrition monitored.
Any patient discharged from specialist care services with continuing problems with swallowing food or liquid safely should:
be trained, or have carers trained, in the identification and management of swallowing difficulties receive planned follow-up and reassessment of the swallowing difficulty.
who need but are unable to tolerate nasogastric tube feeding within the first four weeks are unable to swallow adequate amounts of food and fluid orally at four weeks are at long-term high risk of malnutrition. B
brushing of teeth, dentures and gums with a suitable cleaning agent (toothpaste or chlorhexidine gluconate dental gel) removal of secretions.
Instrumental direct investigation of oropharyngeal swallowing mechanisms (eg by videofluoroscopy or flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing) should only be undertaken:
All patients with dentures should have their dentures: put in appropriately during the day cleaned regularly checked and if necessary replaced by a dentist if ill-fitting, damaged or lost.
in conjunction with a speech and language therapist with specialism in dysphagia if needed to direct an active treatment/rehabilitation technique for their swallowing difficulties, or to investigate the nature and causes of aspiration.
All patients with swallowing difficulties and/or facial weakness who are taking food orally should be taught or helped to clean their teeth or dentures after each meal. Staff or carers responsible for the care of patients disabled by stroke (in hospital, in residential and in home care settings) should be trained in:
Any patient unable to swallow food safely at one week after stroke should be considered for an oro-pharyngeal swallowing rehabilitation programme designed and monitored by a speech and language therapist with specialism in dysphagia. This should include one or more of:
assessment of oral hygiene selection and use of appropriate oral hygiene equipment and cleaning agents recognition and management of swallowing difficulties.
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Patients with difficulties in self-feeding should be assessed and provided with the appropriate equipment to enable them to feed independently and safely.
References
1 Intercollegiate Stroke Working Party. National clinical guideline for stroke, 3rd edition. London: Royal College of Physicians, 2008. National Collaborating Centre for Chronic Conditions (funded by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) to produce guidelines for the NHS). Stroke: national clinical guideline for diagnosis and initial management of acute stroke and transient ischaemic attack (TIA). London: Royal College of Physicians, 2008.
Contacts
Ms Rosemary Cunningham, Speech and Language Therapy, Derbyshire Royal Infirmary, London Road, Derby DE1 2EY. Email: rosemary.cunningham@derbyhospitals.nhs.uk Mrs Kimerley Clarke, Head of SLT Department and Acute Services Lead, Frenchay Hospital, North Bristol NHS Trust, Bristol BS16 1LE. Email: Kim.Clarke@nbt.nhs.uk
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