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Accepted for/Published in: Interactive Journal of Medical Research

Date Submitted: Mar 29, 2017
Open Peer Review Period: Mar 29, 2017 - Jul 22, 2017
Date Accepted: Aug 23, 2017
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

A Strategy to Reduce Critical Cardiorespiratory Alarms due to Intermittent Enteral Feeding of Preterm Neonates in Intensive Care

Joshi R, van Pul C, Sanders A, Weda H, Bikker JW, Feijs L, Andriessen P

A Strategy to Reduce Critical Cardiorespiratory Alarms due to Intermittent Enteral Feeding of Preterm Neonates in Intensive Care

Interact J Med Res 2017;6(2):e20

DOI: 10.2196/ijmr.7756

PMID: 29054835

PMCID: 5670314

A Strategy to Reduce Critical Cardiorespiratory Alarms due to Intermittent Enteral Feeding of Preterm Neonates in Intensive Care

  • Rohan Joshi; 
  • Carola van Pul; 
  • Anouk Sanders; 
  • Hans Weda; 
  • Jan Willem Bikker; 
  • Loe Feijs; 
  • Peter Andriessen

ABSTRACT

Background:

Many preterm infants require enteral feeding as they cannot coordinate sucking, swallowing, and breathing. In enteral feeding, milk feeds are delivered through a small feeding tube passed via the nose or mouth into the stomach. Intermittent milk feeds may either be administered using a syringe to gently push milk into the infant’s stomach (push feed) or milk can be poured into a syringe attached to the tube and allowed to drip in by gravity (gravity feed). This practice of enteral feeding is common in neonatal intensive care units. There is, however, no evidence in the literature to recommend the use of one method of feeding over the other.

Objective:

The aim of this study was to investigate which of the two methods of feeding is physiologically better tolerated by infants, as measured by the incidence of critical cardiorespiratory alarms during and immediately after feeding.

Methods:

We conducted a prospectively designed observational study with records of all feeding episodes in infants of gestational age less than 30 weeks at birth and with a minimum enteral intake of 100 mL/kg/day. In total, 2140 enteral feeding episodes were noted from 25 infants over 308 infant-days with records for several characteristics of the infants (eg, gestational age), feeding (eg, the position of infants), and of nursing-care events before feeding (eg, diapering). Logistic regression with mixed effects was used to model cardiorespiratory alarms for the push and gravity methods of feeding.

Results:

After adjustments were made for all confounding variables, the position of infants was found to be statistically significant in changing the outcome of critical alarms for the two methods of feeding (P=.02). For infants in the lateral position, push feeds led to 40% more instances of one or more critical cardiorespiratory alarms in comparison with the gravity method. Both methods of feeding created a statistically comparable number of alarms for infants in the prone position.

Conclusions:

This study provides objective data that may assist in optimizing enteral feeding protocols for premature infants. The incidence of critical cardiorespiratory alarms for infants in the lateral position can be lowered by the use of gravity instead of push feeding. No differences were observed between the two types of feeding when infants were in the prone position.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Joshi R, van Pul C, Sanders A, Weda H, Bikker JW, Feijs L, Andriessen P

A Strategy to Reduce Critical Cardiorespiratory Alarms due to Intermittent Enteral Feeding of Preterm Neonates in Intensive Care

Interact J Med Res 2017;6(2):e20

DOI: 10.2196/ijmr.7756

PMID: 29054835

PMCID: 5670314

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

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