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Texture and Rheology: The Science of Feeding Individuals with Dysphagia Don Tymchuck, MS President Med-Diet Laboratories, Inc. About Med-Diet, Inc. Don Tymchuck President In business 30+ years Began as R&D lab for medical foods 1. Patents 2. National Dysphagia Diet Became a Distributor 700+ Items Currently serving 12,000+ facilities nationwide Specializing in Niche, Hard-to-Find Products Focus on specialty foods and medical diets Turns too small for distributors Dysphagia • Difficulty or inability to chew or swallow • Usually caused by a disease or injury to nerves and/or muscles used for chewing or swallowing • Affects an estimated 12% of hospitalized patients and up to 50% of long term care patients • Treatment may include diet modifications and restorative and compensatory interventions Dysphagia • Can be a symptom or condition of another diagnosis, i.e. Parkinson’s disease, Multiple Sclerosis, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Stroke, Huntington’s Disease • Is diagnosed and managed through coordinated efforts of Physicians, Speech Language Pathologists, Occupational Therapists, Nurses, and Dietitians “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet”. Romeo and Juliet, Act 2 “’When I use a word’, Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean – neither more nor less’’ Alice Through the Looking-Glass Ch.6 National Dysphagia Diet Project • Conceived in 1996 by the Dietetics in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Practice Group of the American Dietetic Association • Task Force Assembled in 1997 – Dietitians, Speech Language Pathologists, Food Scientists, Industry Representatives Identifying The Need For Dysphagia Diet Standards • A survey conducted by Giel and Ryker : -Surveyed 71 dietitians in 27 states -Revealed 40 terms to describe solid textures and 18 terms to describe liquid viscosities Brown, Mills & Daubert Survey on Liquid Viscosities and Terminology 293 speech language pathologists and 283 dietitians each tested 10 samples of thickened liquids 29 unique labels were provided for the 10 viscosity levels Potential for miscommunication among caregivers was identified based on lack of common nomenclature. Conclusions of the Surveys • Standard terminology describing food and liquids does not exist • Properties of foods and liquids that impact swallowing safety have not been defined or measured • Guidelines for diet prescription for patients with dysphagia have not been established. A System Of Standardized Texture Terminology Has Been Developed By The Food Industry Basic Forces of Chewing & Swallowing Classifying Food Texture 1. Mechanical Parameter Popular Terms Hardness Soft, Firm, Hard Cohesiveness Crumby, Mealy, Cohesive Brittleness Crumbly, Crunchy, Brittle Chewiness Tender, Chewy, Tough Gumminess Short, Mealy, Pasty, Gummy Viscosity Thin, Viscous Springiness Plastic, Springy Adhesiveness Sticky, Tacky, Gooey Corey, H. Texture in Foodstuffs, CRC Critical Reviews in Food Technology , p161-198 (1970) Classifying Food Texture 2. Geometrical Parameter Popular Terms Particle Size Smooth, Sandy, Gritty, Particle Shape Grainy, Coarse, Fibrous, Particle Orientation Cellular, Crystalline 3. Other Characteristics Parameter Popular Terms Moisture Content Dry, Moist, Wet, Watery Fat Content Oily, Greasy Dysphagia Food Texture Terminology Solid and Semi-Solid Foods • Adhesiveness – The work required to overcome the attractive forces between the surface of the food and another contacted surface. An example is peanut butter adhering to the palate • Cohesiveness – The degree to which the food deforms rather than shears when compressed. Often occurring when a moist bolus is compressed between the tongue and palate • Hardness (Chewability) – The force required to compress a solid food to attain a certain deformation. Often occurring in biting and chewing prior to shearing. Dysphagia Food Texture Terminology Solid and Semi-Solid Foods (cont.) • Firmness – The force required to compress a semisolid food. An example is compressing pudding between the tongue and palate • Fracturability (Biteability) – The force that causes a solid food to break. An example is biting peanut brittle with the incisors • Springiness – The degree or rate that a food returns to its original shape after being compressed. An example is a marshmallow being compressed and released between the tongue and palate. • Particle Size – The size of individual pieces Every food can be placed on a continuum for each texture parameter Texture Scale 0 Cohesiveness Adhesiveness Jell-O veg oil Firmness (Semi-solid) Springiness cream cheese Biteability corn muffin Hardness 25 50 75 vanilla pudding mallow fluff oatmeal whip cream cheese spread hot dog graham cracker egg white tapioca pudding canned peas orange section m’mallow dough peanut butter cream cheese Knox blocks ginger snap hot dog 100 peanut brittle carrot (Solid) © 2000 Med-Diet Laboratories, Inc. hard candy Food Texture Ratings are Based on Objective Measurements 1. Mass 2. Length/Distance 3. Time Measuring Eating Forces Compression Adhesiveness Tensile Shear Source: Your Texture Manual for Texture Analysis, Stable Micro Systems, 1997 Fracture Correlating Human Sensory Scores with Instrument Readings Corey, H. Texture in Foodstuffs, CRC Critical Reviews in Food Technology , p161-198 (1970) Analyzed Foods Based on NDD Task Force Recommendations • ~130 solid and semi-solid foods • Asked which textural property made it suitable or unsuitable for each diet level • Measured and compared those properties to develop “break points” between diet levels 6 Major ‘Break Points’ for Solid and Semi-Solid Food 1. Adhesiveness – 1 between Level 1 (Pureed) and all others 2. Cohesiveness – 1 between Level 1 (Pureed) and all others 3. Firmness/Hardness - 1 between Level 1 (Pureed) and Level 2 (Mechanically Altered); and 1 between Level 2 and Level 3 (Advanced) 4. Particle Size - 1 between Level 1 (Pureed) and Level 2 (Mechanically Altered); and 1 between Level 2 and Level 3 (Advanced) Dysphagia Food Texture Terminology: Liquids Viscosity – The rate of flow per unit force. An example is the rate at which a liquid is drawn through a straw. Yield Stress – The minimum amount of shear stress that must be applied to a food before flow begins. An example is the force required to get ketchup to flow. 3 Major ‘Breakpoints’ for Liquid Viscosity Thin 1 Nectar-like 2 Honey-like 3 Spoon Thick National Dysphagia Diet: Standardization for Optimal Care, American Dietetic Association, pp10-19 (2002) Cone and Plate Viscometer Dysphagia Diet Prescription • An attempt to recommend an NDD level based on patients’ swallowing characteristics • 50 experienced SLP’s were asked to match dysphagia rating scale levels to NDD diet levels • A strong correlation between severity rating and NDD was found using the Dysphagia Outcome and Severity Scale – Intended as a guideline for NDD recommendation – Consideration must also be given to other critical factors – Diet “prescriptions” need to include recommendations for solids and liquids National Dysphagia Diet • The National Dysphagia Diet Task Force and the American Dietetic Association (ADA) published their recommendations in “National Dysphagia Diet: Standardization for Optimal Care” in October 2002 • Recent Survey Indicates that about 2/3 of Healthcare facilities follow the NDD to some degree Terminology Guidelines For Liquids Thin: 1-50 cP Nectar-like: 51-350 cP Honey-like: 351-1750 cP Spoon-thick (pudding) >1750 cP – Note: different measuring techniques, equipment, temperature and time will yield different centipoise (cP) readings; measuring must be performed under precise conditions. Terminology guidelines for solid foods • Level 1 – Dysphagia Pureed – Smooth, cohesive, no lumps • Level 2 – Dysphagia Mechanically Altered – Moist, soft textured foods with some cohesion • Level 3 - Dysphagia Advanced – Nearly a regular diet with the exception of very hard, crunchy or sticky foods • Level 4 - Regular Diet Level 1: Dysphagia Pureed Pureed, homogenous, cohesive, pudding-like foods. No coarse textures, raw fruits, raw vegetables, or nuts are allowed. No foods requiring bolus formation, controlled manipulation or mastication. Recommended Avoid • • • • • • • • • • • Pureed or slurried pancakes, breads, pastries Cooked cereals with pudding-like consistency Smooth puddings, custards, yogurt, pureed or soufflés Pureed fruits or mashed bananas Pureed meats or braunschweiger Mashed potatoes with gravy, pureed rice or pasta Pureed vegetables Butter, sour cream, cream cheese Strained gravy, cheese sauce • • • • • Any bread not pureed or slurried Oatmeal and any dry cereal and cooked cereal with lumps or seeds Rice, cookies, cakes, muffins, pies and pastries Whole fruits (fresh or canned) Whole or ground meats, cheese cottage cheese, eggs Non-pureed rice, noodles, potatoes Any vegetable not pureed or containing seeds Level 2: Dysphagia Mechanically Altered Moist, soft-textured, and easily formed into a bolus. Meats are ground or minced no larger than one quarter inch pieces & are moist with some cohesion. All foods from level 1 are allowed. Recommended Avoid • • • • • • • • • Well moistened pancakes, pureed or slurried breads Cooked cereals or slightly moistened dry cereals with little texture (corn flakes) Cobblers (no seeds/nuts), moist cakes, “dunked” cookies Soft drained canned or cooked fruit Ground meats with gravy, eggs, quiche, casseroles w/o rice, meatballs Cooked, moist potatoes, noodles Soft, well cooked vegetables • • • • • Dry un-moistened breads Coarse cooked cereal, cereals with seeds or nuts, dry cereal Dry cakes and cookies, nuts, rice or bread pudding, coconut Dried fruit, fresh or frozen fruit Dry meats, hot dogs, bacon, sandwiches, pizza, cheese cubes Chips, fries, rice Corn, peas, fibrous, non-tender or rubbery vegetables Level 3: Dysphagia Advanced Nearly a regular texture with the exception of very hard, sticky or crunchy foods. Foods still need to be moist and should be “bite-sized” pieces at the oral phase of the swallow. Recommended Avoid • • • • • • • • • Moist biscuits, muffins, waffles, soft bread All moistened cereals Most desserts except those to avoid Canned fruit, soft peeled fresh fruit Thin sliced, tender or ground meat, casseroles, eggs All starches All cooked tender vegetables, shredded lettuce • • • • • Toast, crusty bread, crackers Extra coarse cereals - All Bran, Grape Nuts , shredded wheat Crunchy cookies, sticky candy Apples, stringy or pulpy fruits Tough dry meat or meat and fish with bones, chunky peanut butter Potato skins or chips Raw, crunchy vegetables Simplified Dysphagia Severity Assessment System Based on National Dysphagia Diet Dysphagia Viscosity Assessment Flow Chart Administer Level 3 Viscosity Warning Signs Yes Recommend Spoon Thick Viscosity No Administer Level 2 Viscosity No Warning Signs Administer Level 1 Viscosity Warning Signs Yes Recommend Honey-like Viscosity No Recommend Thin Viscosity Yes Recommend Nectar-like Viscosity Safest Riskiest Breaking Points Level 3: Spoon Thick/Honey-like Level 2: Honey-like/Nectar-like Level 1: Nectar-like/Thin Dysphagia Foods Assessment Flow Chart* Administer Adhesiveness Sample No Warning Signs Administer Cohesiveness Sample Warning Signs Yes No Administer Hardness Level 1 Warning Signs Yes Recommend Puree Diet Yes Recommend Puree Diet Yes (Recommend Mechanically Altered Diet) No Administer Hardness Level 2 Recommend Puree Diet Recommend Advanced Diet No Warning Signs Yes Recommend Mechanically Altered Diet Administer Particle Size Level 2 No Warning Signs Administer Particle Size Level 1 No Warning Signs Yes Recommend Puree Diet *Assumes patient is an oral feeding candidate Conclusion: The chewing and swallowing capability of every person with dysphagia could be objectively matched with the proper diet level using 9 controlledtexture samples • • • • • 1 Adhesiveness 1 Cohesiveness 2 Firmness/Hardness 2 Particle Size 3 Viscosity Food Science Has Developed Many Tools That Can Aid In Evaluating And Treating Dysphagia Videos For Dysphagia Caregivers (in English and Spanish) 1. 2. 3. 4. About Thickened Liquids The Pureed Diet Made Easy The Mechanically Altered Diet Made Easy Pleasing Plate Presentations for the Dysphagia Diet www.Dysphagia-Diet.com Booth #1608 Caregiver Videos www.Dysphagia-Diet.com Thank you! Blandin Foundation University of Minnesota University of Florida National Institutes of Health Sister Kenney Institute and many more…