Ann Rehabil Med.  2012 Dec;36(6):791-796.

Inter-rater Reliability of Videofluoroscopic Dysphagia Scale

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Asan Medical Center, Seoul 138-042, Korea. khchoi@amc.seoul.kr
  • 2Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Kangneung Asan Hospital University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Kangneung 211-711, Korea.
  • 3Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Jeju College of Medicine, Jeju 690-767, Korea.
  • 4Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Kangneung Dong-in Hospital, Kangneung 210-111, Korea.
  • 5Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, CHA University College of Medicine, Seongnam 463-712, Korea.
  • 6Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Catholic University of Korea, College of Medicine, Bucheon 420-717, Korea.
  • 7Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju 501-757, Korea.
  • 8Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul 136-705, Korea.
  • 9Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Dongguk University College of Medicine, Goyang 410-773, Korea.
  • 10Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Won-Gwang University College of Medicine, Gunpo 435-040, Korea.
  • 11Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Seoul Veteran's Hospital, Seoul 134-791, Korea.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
To investigate the inter-rater agreement using the Videofluoroscopic Dysphagia Scale (VDS). METHOD: The present study was designed as a multicenter, single-blind trial. A Videofluoroscopic Swallowing Study (VFSS) was performed using the protocol described by J.A Logemann. Thick-fluid, pureed food, mechanically altered food, regularly textured food, and thin-fluid boluses were sequentially swallowed. Each participant received a 3 ml bolus followed by a 5 ml bolus of each food material, in the order mentioned above. All study procedures were video recorded. Discs containing these video recordings in random order were distributed to interpreters who were blinded to the participant information. The video recordings were evaluated using a standardized VDS sheet and the inter-rater reliability was calculated.
RESULTS
In total, 100 patients participated in this study and 10 interpreters analyzed the findings. Inter-rater reliability was fair in terms of lip closure (kappa: 0.325), oral transit time (0.253), delayed triggering of pharyngeal swallowing (0.300), vallecular residue (0.275), laryngeal elevation (0.345), pyriform sinus residue (0.310), coating of the pharyngeal wall (0.310), and aspiration (0.393). However, other parameters of the oral phase were lower than those of the pharyngeal phase (0.06-0.153). Moreover, the summation of VDS reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.556) showed moderate agreement.
CONCLUSION
VDS shows a moderate rate of agreement for evaluating the swallowing function. However, many of the parameters demonstrated a lower rate of agreement, particularly the oral phase parameters.

Keyword

VDS; Reliability; Inter-rater; Dysphagia; VFSS

MeSH Terms

Deglutition
Deglutition Disorders
Humans
Lip
Pyriform Sinus
Video Recording

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