Tastes so good: Learning to swallow after stroke
Yahoo News highlights UC trial
Yahoo News highlighted a trial at the University of Cincinnati testing an at-home tongue endurance exercise to improve patients’ swallowing function.
“Eating and drinking is something we all take for granted and do every single day,” said Brittany Krekeler, PhD, assistant professor and clinician-scientist at the UC College of Medicine’s Dysphagia Rehabilitation Laboratory. “A lot of patients that are recovering from stroke do have what we call oral phase impairments in swallowing and that their tongue is weak."
Patients enrolled in the trial led by Krekeler receive a device with a pressurized bulb that connects to their phone or tablet through Bluetooth to give them real-time feedback about how hard they are pressing the bulb with their tongue. Participants in the trial will press their tongue to the bulb, with the device recording the number of times they do so and if they meet their goal. They’ll complete the exercises three times a day for eight weeks, with their goal increasing as they build endurance.
After a stroke, patient Kevin Moss had to learn how to walk, talk and swallow again. Following surgery, he worked with Krekeler and did tongue exercises to strengthen his swallowing function.
“I eat anything and everything now,” he sais.
Read the Yahoo News story, originally published on YourErie.com.
Quincy, Illinois television station WGEM also highlighted the trial. Watch or read the WGEM article.
Featured photo at top of a patient working in the Dysphagia Rehabilitation Laboratory. Photo/Rachel Treinen Photography.
Related Stories
How the University of Cincinnati co-op program is shaping the future of work at SXSW
March 17, 2026
The University of Cincinnati served as a 2026 Workplace Track sponsor at the annual South by Southwest (SXSW) Innovation Conference March 12-18 in Austin, Texas, showcasing how co-op is redesigning the future of work.
Recent advances may speed time to endometriosis diagnosis
March 16, 2026
The average time to clinical diagnosis of endometriosis is nine years. Definitive diagnosis of the disease is difficult, and until recently, has relied on laparoscopic surgery. Now, as Medscape recently reported, novel clinical recommendations, advanced diagnostic tools and research into inflammation and immune responses, are bringing promise that women with endometriosis will find relief sooner and without surgery, according to experts, including Katie Burns, PhD, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine associate professor.
Position-specific helmets may not improve protection
March 16, 2026
Local 12 highlighted a new study by biomedical engineering researchers that looked at how well new football helmets protected players from impacts that can cause concussions.