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hannah20082 hannah20082
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6 years ago
Mrs. Parker has been hospitalized after a stroke. Her daughter is helping her to eat her meals because the stroke has left her with dysphagia and right side paralysis.
 
  Wendy, the student nurse caring for Mrs. Parker, is concerned about aspiration and discusses this potential complication with Mrs. Parker's daughter. Wendy knows additional teaching is necessary when Mrs. Parker's daughter states:
  A. I will know when Mom is aspirating her food because she will cough.
  B. Mom's gag reflex is not as strong as it once was.
  C. I need to watch for pocketing food as I feed Mom.
  D. It takes much longer to feed Mom than it did before the stroke.
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wrote...
6 years ago
A
Patients with dysphagia do not usually exhibit overt signs such as coughing when food enters the airway. Silent aspiration, or aspiration that occurs without a cough, is a common cause of complications. Silent aspiration accounts for 40 to 70 of aspiration in patients with dysphagia after stroke.
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