Efficacy of Oral Rehabilitation Therapy in Terms of Neonatal Outcomes in Preterm Infants
Neonatal Medicine
;
: 91-95, 2019.
Article
in Korean
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-760578
ABSTRACT
PURPOSE:
To evaluate the efficacy of oral rehabilitation therapy (ORT) in terms of prematurity-associated morbidities in preterm infants born before a gestational age of 33 weeks.METHODS:
This was a single-institution retrospective case-control study including 78 high-risk preterm infants born between January 2015 and December 2016, who were administered with ORT for at least 15 minutes, 2 to 5 times/week by an occupational therapist. Various factors associated with feeding progression and neonatal morbidities were compared between the two groups.RESULTS:
Seventy-eight subjects, of whom 39 were cases and 39 controls, were included in this study. Infants in the case group achieved a greater total feeding volume (122.9±85.3 mL vs. 48.9±25.7 mL, P<0.001), i.e., 8 times/day with oral feeding only, and showed significantly higher body weight (1,852.1±303.3 g vs. 1,592.3±444.1 g, P=0.003) than those in the control group with complete oral feeding day. The duration from the first day of oral feeding to full enteral feeding, i.e., 150 mL/day, was significantly shorter in the cases than that in the controls (15.4±1.4 days vs. 23.1±1.8 days, P=0.004). The body weight at discharge was higher in the cases than that in the controls (3,102.6± 619.3 g vs. 2,744.6± 436.8 g, P=0.008). Moreover, the incidence of late-onset sepsis was lower in the cases than that in the controls (12.8% vs. 25.6%, P=0.033). Other prematurity-associated morbidities were not different between the two groups.CONCLUSION:
ORT in preterm infants facilitated the transition process from tube feeding to full oral feeding and reduced the incidence of late-onset sepsis.
Full text:
Available
Index:
WPRIM (Western Pacific)
Main subject:
Rehabilitation
/
Body Weight
/
Bottle Feeding
/
Infant, Premature
/
Case-Control Studies
/
Incidence
/
Retrospective Studies
/
Gestational Age
/
Treatment Outcome
/
Enteral Nutrition
Type of study:
Incidence study
/
Observational study
/
Prognostic study
/
Risk factors
Limits:
Humans
/
Infant
/
Infant, Newborn
Language:
Korean
Journal:
Neonatal Medicine
Year:
2019
Type:
Article
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