Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT01237015

Effect of Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) on Oral Feeding in Human Neonates

Effect of Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) on Sucking, Swallowing and Coordination of Breathing and Swallowing During Oral Feeding in Human Neonates

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (estimated)
Sponsor
Université de Sherbrooke · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Current knowledge suggests that, to be successful, oral feeding in preterm babies should be initiated as soon as possible, often at an age where immature respiration still requires ventilatory support in the form of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). While some neonatologist teams claim great success with initiation of oral feeding in immature babies with CPAP, others strictly wait for CPAP to be no longer necessary before any attempt at oral feeding. Such controversy is fuelled by ignorance of the effects of CPAP on nutritive sucking and swallowing, including their coordination with breathing, and the fear to induce deleterious problems such as pulmonary aspiration of milk and/or respiratory failure. Ensuing delay in becoming proficient with oral feeding unduly prolongs hospital stays of preterm babies. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of nasal CPAP on oral feeding in human neonates. More specifically, CPAP effects on nutritive sucking and swallowing, including on breathing-swallowing coordination, will be carefully assessed. The investigators hypothesize that nasal CPAP will lead to no or minimal alterations of breathing-nutritive swallowing coordination and will not induce deleterious cardiorespiratory events. Accordingly, each neonate will be evaluated during 2 bottle feedings spaced of 24 h, one with nasal CPAP 5 cm H2O and the other without any CPAP. Sucking and swallowing activity, respiration, heart rate and oxygenation will be continuously recorded before, during and after bottle-feeding. By filling a gap in knowledge, results from the study will hopefully help neonatologists afraid of doing more harm than good when initiating bottle-feeding in preterm babies under CPAP to join the many teams for whom it is no more a problem.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEInfant Flow nasal CPAPInfant Flow nasal CPAP 5 cm H2O

Timeline

Start date
2010-09-01
Primary completion
2012-09-01
Completion
2012-09-01
First posted
2010-11-09
Last updated
2011-01-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01237015. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.