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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06615323

The Effect of Polyphonic Lullaby and Pish Pish Sound on Sleep Transition and Sleep Duration in Newborns

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
81 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sevgi Beyazgül · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
0 Days – 3 Months
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Sleep is the cornerstone of early development. Adequate sleep in children is important for proper growth, development and the child's health. Sleep is a dynamic process that develops and matures rapidly, especially in the first few years of life, from infancy to early adolescence. Daily sleep duration decreases with age, starting from the newborn period. At birth, babies show a sleep process that is compatible with their mothers' circadian rhythm. Newborns usually wake up in line with their nutritional needs and have short transitional sleep periods. At approximately 10-12 weeks of age, the first signs of circadian rhythm begin to develop and become apparent with increased sleep during the night. It has been reported that music positively affects mother-infant bonding, reduces babies' stress and creates positive physiological and behavioral changes. In a study examining mothers' views and practices on singing lullabies, it was seen that 87.6% of mothers said that singing lullabies soothes their children and prepares them for sleep, 88.3% prefer to sing lullabies before going to sleep while preparing their children for sleep, and 66.2% sing lullabies. Therefore, it is thought that the research will fill this gap in newborns.

Detailed description

Sleep is the cornerstone of early development. At approximately 10-12 weeks of age, the first signs of the circadian rhythm begin to develop and become evident with increased nighttime sleep. The change in the total 24-hour sleep duration decreases as the baby grows, gradually adapting to the circadian sleep rhythm. Daily sleep duration in newborns decreases to 16-17 hours, 14-15 hours at 16 weeks of age, and 13-14 hours at 6 months of age. As the baby grows, the need for daytime sleep decreases, resulting in a shift towards more nighttime sleep patterns. In recent years, studies examining the effects of music, especially on newborns, have increased. Music is a complex auditory stimulus consisting of various components such as melody, rhythm, timbre, and harmony. When adults listen to music, these components are perceived as a phenomenological whole, but they are processed separately through a complex dual cortical and subcortical regions. Since the adult human brain does not have a single musical center, the neural substrates supporting musical perception and production vary depending on the musical task. Neuroimaging studies in neonates or infants have reported inconsistent results regarding cortical activation in response to musical stimuli. While two studies showed weak bilateral responses to musical stimuli, results from a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study used to measure brain activity in 1- to 3-day-old neonates hearing excerpts of Western tone music and modified versions of the same excerpts suggest that the infant brain shows hemispheric specialization in right-lateralized auditory cortex activity for processing music in the early postnatal hours, and that the neural architecture underlying music processing in neonates is sensitive to changes in tone key as well as differences in consonance and dissonance. It has been found that infants can maintain distinct memory traces for polyphonic music and show a high preference for polyphonic music from 3 months onwards. Marie and Trainor (2014) hypothesize that this high-volume advantage may be mediated at the level of the auditory nerve at birth. In general, the presence of immature mismatch negativity (MMN) occurs when there is an occasional change or deviant stimulus in a continuing standard stimulus sequence. Again, this more complex MMN-like response to polyphonic stimuli has been reported to have a longer developmental trajectory than the MMN elicited by a single tone stimulus. Early musical involvement is very important for the auditory system, which mostly matures in the first 6 months after birth. Polyphonic lullabies, known in the literature as polyphony consisting of sounds or music, are music played especially during the rapid development period (0-4 years) of infants and children. When the literature was examined, no randomized controlled studies were found that revealed the effects of polyphonic lullabies and piş piş sounds on the transition to sleep and sleep duration in healthy newborns. It was thought that the research results would provide strong evidence to support the development of approaches to improving sleep in newborns.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPolyphonic Lullaby GroupAfter discharge, mothers will be asked to play the Dandini Dandini Dastana lullaby by vocal artist Mircan Kaya, which they downloaded from the YouTube application, and listen to it from a distance of one meter (away from the baby's head to minimize radioactive effects) and by switching the phone to airplane mode just before sleep. In the event of active sleep (signs of sleep transition such as slowing down muscle movements and closing eyes), the polyphonic lullaby volume will be gradually reduced. The polyphonic lullaby will be played at a volume level of 55 decibels for the first 5 minutes after falling asleep, then reduced to 25 decibels and then turned off. In order to reduce the effects of confounding factors, mothers in the polyphonic lullaby group who use another assistive method (breastfeeding/rocking to sleep) to put their babies to sleep will be excluded from the study.
OTHERPish Pish Sound GroupAfter discharge, mothers will be asked to turn on the Piş Piş sound downloaded from the YouTube application and listen to it from a distance of one meter (away from the baby's head to minimize radioactive effects) and by turning the phone to airplane mode just before sleep. In case of active sleep (signs of sleep transition such as slowing down muscle movements and closing eyes), the piş piş sound will be gradually reduced. The polyphonic lullaby played will be at a volume level of 55 decibels for the first 5 minutes after falling asleep, then reduced to 25 decibels and then turned off. In order to reduce the effect of confounding factors, mothers in the piş piş sound group who use another assistive method (breastfeeding/rocking to sleep) to put their babies to sleep will be excluded from the scope of the research.

Timeline

Start date
2024-10-01
Primary completion
2025-10-01
Completion
2025-10-01
First posted
2024-09-26
Last updated
2024-09-26

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06615323. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.