Swallowing After Stroke
A Guide for Patients and Families
Up to 65% of acute stroke patients experience dysphagia. The good news: most improve with the right rehabilitation, diet management, and monitoring. This guide explains what to expect and how to help.
Why Stroke Causes Swallowing Difficulties
A brief clinical explanation for patients and families.
Swallowing is a complex reflex coordinated by the brainstem and multiple cranial nerves — including the trigeminal (V), facial (VII), glossopharyngeal (IX), vagus (X), and hypoglossal (XII). A stroke that damages the brainstem or cortical swallowing centres disrupts these signals.
The result can range from mild difficulty initiating a swallow to complete loss of the swallow reflex. The most dangerous consequence is silent aspiration — food or fluid entering the airway without triggering a cough — which causes aspiration pneumonia.
Because the swallowing pathway is bilateral (both sides of the brain contribute), many patients recover function as the unaffected hemisphere compensates — a process called neuroplasticity. This is why early rehabilitation and consistent monitoring matter so much.
Up to 65%
of acute stroke patients have dysphagia on admission
~50%
recover normal swallowing within 2 weeks with rehabilitation
#1 cause
of post-stroke pneumonia is aspiration from unmanaged dysphagia
6 months
is the key window for the most significant neuroplastic recovery
Recovery Timeline — What to Expect
Every stroke is different, but these general phases help set realistic expectations for the recovery journey.
Acute Phase
Day 1–7Swallowing reflex may be absent or severely impaired. NPO (nothing by mouth) is common pending formal SLT assessment.
IDDSI Level 0 fluids or nil by mouth — SLT-directed
Early Subacute Phase
Week 1–4Swallowing begins to return for many patients. Progressive oral trials begin under SLT supervision.
IDDSI Level 0–3 — advancing as tolerated with SLT clearance
Late Subacute Phase
Month 1–6Significant neuroplastic recovery occurs. Most improvement happens in this window. Dysphagia may fully resolve or reach a stable plateau.
IDDSI Level 3–5 — advancing toward regular texture as SLT approves
Chronic Phase
6 months+Recovery slows but continues. Some patients retain permanent dysphagia and need long-term dietary management.
Stable IDDSI level — monitor with EAT-10 every 3–6 months
IDDSI Diet Progression for Stroke Recovery
Starting at Level 0–1, the goal is to progress toward normal texture as swallowing improves — always under SLT guidance.
Thin / Slightly Thick Fluids
Starting point for many post-stroke patients. Thickened fluids reduce aspiration risk while swallowing reflex recovers.
Mildly Thick / Liquidised
As reflex improves, fluids can be thinned and puréed foods introduced. Progress is guided by videofluoroscopy or bedside assessment.
Puréed / Minced & Moist
Soft, moist foods. Safe for patients with moderate dysphagia who can manage cohesive boluses. Most common long-term level for stroke survivors.
Soft & Bite-Sized / Regular
Near-normal diet. Achieved by patients with good recovery. SLT clearance required before progressing to this level.
Important: Do not change IDDSI levels without clearance from a speech-language therapist. Premature diet progression is a leading cause of aspiration pneumonia in stroke recovery.
Use the GUSS Swallowing Screen
A validated bedside assessment for post-stroke patients — built into the SeniorDeli app. The Gugging Swallowing Screen (GUSS) lets clinical teams and trained caregivers screen swallowing safety in four structured subtests, with a clear severity score.
Free Tools for Stroke Recovery
Monitor, manage, and communicate swallowing safety between clinical visits.
EAT-10 Ongoing Monitoring
The EAT-10 is a 10-item validated questionnaire for tracking dysphagia severity over time. Use it every 1–3 months to monitor recovery progress and share results with your SLT.
Snap-to-IDDSI Meal Checks
Use the AI camera tool in the SeniorDeli app to verify that any meal meets the prescribed IDDSI level — at home, in hospital, or in a care home dining room.
IDDSI Diet Level Matcher
If you are unsure which level applies between SLT visits, use the IDDSI Matcher to get a suggested starting point — then confirm with your care team.
Working with Your Care Team
Post-stroke dysphagia management is a team effort. Here is who is involved and how SeniorDeli supports coordination.
Speech-Language Therapist (SLT)
Formally assesses swallowing via bedside evaluation or videofluoroscopy. Prescribes IDDSI level and approves progression. The clinical lead for dysphagia management.
Dietitian
Ensures the IDDSI-modified diet meets nutritional needs. Critical for patients who cannot eat enough due to texture restrictions. Often works alongside the SLT.
Care Home & Family
Implement the prescribed diet consistently at every meal. SeniorDeli tools help care teams and families stay aligned on IDDSI levels even as staff changes.
Supporting Recovery, One Meal at a Time
Free tools for post-stroke patients and families — screen with EAT-10, check meals with Snap-to-IDDSI, and find care home support through our pilot programme.