4.4 Article

Severity of sialorrhea and tracheal secretions in infants and toddlers with a tracheostomy with a focus on quality of life

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY
卷 42, 期 6, 页码 -

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W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2021.103074

关键词

Tracheostomy; Sialorrhea; Quality of life; QoL; HRQoL; DIS; TSSS

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This study aimed to investigate the severity of sialorrhea and tracheal secretions in infants and toddlers with a tracheostomy, and their correlation with quality of life. The results showed that drooling severity does not significantly impact health perception and parental impact quality of life, but overall drooling impact scores and frequency are related to tracheostomy secretion severity.
Objective: Sialorrhea and tracheal secretions can be present in patients with a tracheostomy. The current study seeks to survey the severity of sialorrhea and tracheal secretions in infants and toddlers with a tracheostomy, and to correlate this severity with quality of life. Methods: Prospective cross-sectional survey pilot study: 26 patients (ages 0.33 years - 4.09 years) were given the Infant/Toddler Quality of Life Questionnaire Short Form 47, the Drooling Impact Scale and assessed for severity of tracheal secretions with a Tracheostomy Secretion Severity Scale. Spearman's correlation and Mann Whitney U tests were used to assess correlation between and contributors to quality of life, drooling severity, and tracheostomy secretion severity, number of outpatient visits, and respiratory related hospitalizations. Results: Average health perception quality of life was 46.7 and average parental impact quality of life was 58.85. The average for the Drooling Impact Scale overall was 19.7, for frequency 4.16, for severity 3.12 and for the Tracheostomy Secretion Severity Scale 2.4. There was strong correlation between the Drooling Impact Scale and the Tracheostomy Secretion Severity Scale (R = 0.432 p = 0.03) overall, and moderate correlation between Drooling Impact Scale and Tracheostomy Secretion Severity Scale (R = 0.39956 p = 0.047) frequency. There was no correlation between health perception quality of life or parental impact quality of life and Drooling Impact Scale or Tracheostomy Secretion Severity Scale. Conclusion: Drooling severity does not have significant impacts on health perception and parental impact quality of life for infants and toddlers who have a tracheostomy. Overall drooling impact scores and drooling frequency are related to tracheostomy secretion severity.

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