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Michael A. Crary

Researcher at University of Central Florida

Publications -  90
Citations -  5215

Michael A. Crary is an academic researcher from University of Central Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dysphagia & Swallowing. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 88 publications receiving 4350 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael A. Crary include University of Florida & University of Florida Health Science Center.

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Initial Psychometric Assessment of a Functional Oral Intake Scale for Dysphagia in Stroke Patients

TL;DR: The FOIS may be appropriate for estimating and documenting change in the functional eating abilities of stroke patients over time and had adequate reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change in functional oral intake.
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Dysphagia in the elderly: management and nutritional considerations

TL;DR: Data describing age related changes in swallowing is reviewed and the relationship of dysphagia in patients following stroke, those with dementia, and in community dwelling elderly is discussed, including both compensatory and rehabilitative approaches.
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"Pharyngocise": randomized controlled trial of preventative exercises to maintain muscle structure and swallowing function during head-and-neck chemoradiotherapy.

TL;DR: Patients completing a program of swallowing exercises during cancer treatment demonstrated superior muscle maintenance and functional swallowing ability.
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Functional benefits of dysphagia therapy using adjunctive sEMG biofeedback.

TL;DR: A retrospective analysis of functional outcome, time in therapy, and cost per unit of functional change in patients who received therapy for pharyngeal dysphagia demonstrates greater improvement than those in the head/neck cancer group.
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Examining the evidence on neuromuscular electrical stimulation for swallowing: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of transcutaneous neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) on swallowing rehabilitation was evaluated using a meta-analysis, and a small but significant summary effect size was identified for the application of NMES for swallowing.