Effect of Tactile Experience During Preterm Infant Feeding on Clinical Outcomes

Rita H Pickler, Jareen Meinzen-Derr, Margo Moore, Stephanie Sealschott, Karin Tepe, Rita H Pickler, Jareen Meinzen-Derr, Margo Moore, Stephanie Sealschott, Karin Tepe

Abstract

Background: Although the survival rate of very preterm infants has improved, rates of subsequent neurobehavioral disabilities remain high. One factor implicated in poor neurobehavioral and developmental outcomes is hospitalization and inconsistent caregiving patterns in the neonatal intensive care unit. Although much underlying brain damage occurs in utero or shortly after birth, neuroprotective strategies may stop progression of damage, particularly when these strategies are used during the most sensitive periods of neural plasticity 2-3 months before term age.

Objective: The purpose of this analysis was to test the effect of a patterned feeding experience involving a tactile component (touch and/or holding) provided during feedings on preterm infants' clinical outcomes, measured by oral feeding progress, as an early indicator of neurodevelopment.

Methods: We used an experimental, longitudinal, two-group random assignment design. Preterm infants (n = 120) were enrolled within the first week of life and randomized to an experimental group receiving a patterned feeding experience or to a control group receiving usual feeding care.

Results: Analysis of data from 91 infants showed that infants receiving touch at more than 25% of early gavage feedings achieved full oral feeding more quickly; as touch exposure increased, time from first oral to full oral feeding decreased. There was no association between holding during early gavage feedings or touch during transition feedings and time to full oral feeding.

Discussion: Neurological expectation during critical periods of development is important for infants. However, a preterm infant's environment is not predictable: Caregivers change regularly, medical procedures dictate touch and holding, and care provision based on infant cues is limited. Current knowledge supports caregiving that occurs with a naturally occurring sensation (i.e., hunger), is provided in a manner that is congruent with the expectation of the neurological system, and occurs with enough regularity to enhance neuronal and synaptic development. In this study, we modeled an experience infants would "expect" if they were not in the neonatal intensive care unit and demonstrated a shorter time from first oral feeding to full oral feeding, an important clinical outcome with neurodevelopmental implications. We recommend further research to determine the effect of patterned caregiving experiences on other areas of neurodevelopment, particularly those that may occur later in life.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01577615.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Survival curves for the adjusted duration between first oral and full oral feedings by quartiles of percent of tactile experience during early gavage. Infants in the lowest quartile achieved full oral feeding on average 38 days after initiating oral feeding while infants in the highest quartile achieved full oral feeding on average 18 days after initiating oral feeding.

Source: PubMed

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