4.3 Article

Oral and nonoral sensorimotor interventions facilitate suck-swallow-respiration functions and their coordination in preterm infants

Journal

EARLY HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Volume 88, Issue 6, Pages 345-350

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2011.09.007

Keywords

Oral stimulation; Tactile/Kinesthetic stimulation; Bottle feeding; Feeding difficulty; Respiration-swallow coordination

Funding

  1. Fonds de la Recherche en Sante du Quebec
  2. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [R01-HD 044469]

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Background: Preterm infants are at high risk of encountering oral feeding difficulties. Early sensorimotor interventions may improve oral feeding skills in preterm infants. Aim: To further explore the effects of an oral (O), tactile/kinesthetic (T/K), and combined(O + T/K) sensorimotor intervention on preterm infants' nutritive sucking, swallowing and their coordination with respiration. Study design: Seventy-five infants (29 [0.3, standard error of mean, SEM] weeks gestation, 49 males/26 females) were randomly assigned to an O group involving sensorimotor input to the oral structures:a T/K group involving sensorimotor input to the trunk and limbs; a combined (O + T/K) group: and a control group. Outcome measures: Stage of sucking, suction and expression amplitudes (mm Hg), suck-swallow ratio, stability of suck-swallow interval, and swallow-respiration patterns. Results: The O group had significantly more advanced sucking stages, and greater suction and expression amplitudes than controls [p <= 0.035, effect size (ES) > 0.6]. The suck-swallow ratio and stability of suck-swallow intervals did not significantly differ among groups (p >= 0.181, ES <= 03). The three interventions led to fewer swallows bracketed by prolonged respiratory pauses compared to controls (pause-swallow-pause, p <= 0.044, ES >= 0.7). The T/K and combined (O + T/K) groups had greater occurrence of swallows bracketed by expiration than the control and O groups (expiration-swallow-expiration, p <= 0.039, ES >= 03). Conclusion: The O intervention enhanced specific components of nutritive sucking. All three interventions resulted in improved swallow-respiration coordination. Sensorimotor interventions have distributed beneficial effects that go beyond the specific target of input. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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