10
Participants
Start Date
November 1, 2024
Primary Completion Date
August 30, 2025
Study Completion Date
December 30, 2025
Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation
NMES is a modality for stimulating muscles through electrical pulses, is used widely in the rehabilitation of stroke patients with pharyngeal dysphagia. It reinforces the strength of the muscles for swallowing and smooths the swallowing reflex through sensory stimulation. Clinically, NMES is applied to depolarize nerve fibers at the point of engagement, involving muscle contraction (Park et al. 2019). NMES includes the placement of electrical stimuli to the skin around the face and neck through surface electrodes. Stimulation intensity can be diverse depending on the treatment objectives. Low-intensity (sensory) NMES lets patients feel the tingling sensation on the skin, whereas high-intensity (motor) NMES can stimulate muscle contractions (Cheng et al. 2022).
Neuromuscular Taping
NMT is similar to kinesiology taping but specifically focuses on neuromuscular re-education and it is a commonly used therapy approach for various neuromuscular problems. The neuromuscular tape can be easily applied to skeletal muscles to induce or inhibit muscle activity and to support the stabilization of structures such as joints and ligaments. The elasticity and adhesion properties of NMT can be used to restrain the anterior-upward movement of the hyolaryngeal complex during spontaneous swallowing. This effect increases the load on the suprahyoid muscles and consequently, the patient spends more effort to overcome this movement while swallowing. Resistance exercises provided with NMT activate the suprahyoid muscle and contractions for the muscles of the tongue.
Swallowing exercise (Expiratory Muscle Strength Training)
IN EMST the patients blow into a one-way spring-loaded apparatus calibrated to a percentage of maximum expiratory pressure until the valve opens with adequate effort. Four to eight weeks of EMST exercises increased the maximum expiratory pressure (MEP), maximum hyoid displacement, suprahyoid muscle action, and swallowing safety in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, stroke, and neck cancer.
Swallowing exercise (Chin Tuck Against Resistance)
CTAR exercise is performed by an inflatable 12 cm rubber ball. The patients are directed to sit upright on a chair and hold the rubber ball between the base of the chin and the manubrium sterna. This exercise is composed of isometric and isotonic movements. The isometric movement will be performed for 10 seconds, whereas the isokinetic movement will be successively repeated 10 times to strengthen the suprahyoid and infrahyoid muscles (Kagaya \& Inamoto, 2022).
RECRUITING
Hamad Medical Corporation, Doha
Lead Sponsor
Hamad Medical Corporation
INDUSTRY