College of Health Sciences, Rush University, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
Library of Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
Early Hum Dev. 2024 Nov;198:106125. doi: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2024.106125. Epub 2024 Sep 24.
One criterion for infant NICU discharge is the ability to meet all nutritional needs by mouth, therefore, it is important to understand interventions that can improve the trajectory to full oral feeding. While many oral motor and feeding interventions are used in clinical practice, it remains unclear which are supported by the literature.
The aim of this integrative review was to identify and understand what oral motor interventions are defined in the literature to support positive outcomes for preterm infants and their parents.
An integrative review of studies published from 2002 to 2022 focusing on applied oral motor interventions and their impact on feeding-related outcomes was completed. The systematic search used databases including PubMed, Cochrane, CINAHL, Scopus, and Google Scholar. Studies were included if they used a study population of preterm infants born </= 32 weeks estimated gestational age (EGA) and imposed an oral motor intervention/exposure that commenced prior to 36 weeks postmenstrual age (PMA) while the infant was in the NICU, with outcomes of time to full oral feeding, length of stay (LOS), feeding performance measures, feeding efficiency, weight gain, infant physiology, and/or parental outcomes. Studies were excluded if they were observational, pilot, or feasibility designs; if they enrolled a purposefully healthy sample of infants; had non-relevant outcomes including apnea and incidence of retinopathy of prematurity; had a sample size <30 without a priori calculation of power or had a calculated sample size that was not attained.
Forty articles met inclusion criteria with four different interventions (or a combination of them) identified: nonnutritive sucking, oral motor stimulation [Fucile's protocol, Premature Infant Oral Motor Intervention (PIOMI)], NTrainer, and swallowing exercises.
All interventions were associated with positive outcomes and began between 29- and 30-weeks PMA. Detailed information on adverse events (both physiologic and behavioral) in future research could allow for better risk-benefit analysis. The methodology and quality of the studies differed too much to allow for quantitative analysis; however, there does not appear to be compelling evidence that more stimulatory interventions are superior to less stimulatory interventions - a key consideration when working with preterm infants.
婴儿 NICU 出院的标准之一是能够通过口腔满足所有营养需求,因此,了解可以改善完全口服喂养轨迹的干预措施非常重要。虽然在临床实践中使用了许多口腔运动和喂养干预措施,但文献中支持哪些干预措施仍不清楚。
本综合评价旨在确定和了解文献中定义的哪些口腔运动干预措施可支持早产儿及其父母的积极结果。
对 2002 年至 2022 年期间发表的重点关注应用口腔运动干预及其对喂养相关结果影响的研究进行了综合评价。系统检索使用了包括 PubMed、Cochrane、CINAHL、Scopus 和 Google Scholar 在内的数据库。如果研究使用的研究人群为出生时 </= 32 周估计胎龄(EGA)的早产儿,并在婴儿在 NICU 时实施了开始于 36 周后进行的口腔运动干预/暴露,且研究结果为完全口服喂养的时间、住院时间(LOS)、喂养表现测量、喂养效率、体重增加、婴儿生理和/或父母结果,则纳入研究。如果研究为观察性、试点或可行性设计、纳入了有目的的健康婴儿样本、与呼吸暂停和早产儿视网膜病变的发病率等无关的结果、样本量 <30 且没有预先计算的功效或计算的样本量未达到,则排除研究。
有 40 篇文章符合纳入标准,确定了四种不同的干预措施(或它们的组合):非营养性吸吮、口腔运动刺激[Fucile 方案、早产儿口腔运动干预(PIOMI)]、NTrainer 和吞咽练习。
所有干预措施均与积极结果相关,且开始于 29-30 周 PMA。未来研究中关于不良事件(生理和行为)的详细信息可以进行更好的风险效益分析。研究的方法和质量差异太大,无法进行定量分析;然而,似乎没有令人信服的证据表明更具刺激性的干预措施优于刺激性较小的干预措施-这是与早产儿合作时的一个关键考虑因素。