Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the effect of sweet taste stimulation in augmenting the reported growth-enhancing effects of nonnutritive sucking in preterm infants who are gavage-fed.
DESIGN
Random assignment of preterm infants to receive stimulation by one of three methods during each feeding until totally orally fed.
SETTING
Hospital intensive-care and infant transitional units.
PATIENTS
Eligibility criteria included body weight greater than or equal to 1,250 g, gestational age younger than 34 weeks, growth parameters appropriate for gestational age, tolerating at least 100 kcals/kg/day by gavage feeding with evidence of weight gain, and no clinical evidence of health complications. Data are presented for 42 infants who completed 14 days of treatment.
INTERVENTIONS
Exposure to a sweet pacifier, a latex pacifier, or maternal heartbeat sounds during gavage feedings.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Growth, time to total oral feeding, and sucking responses.
RESULTS
No significant differences in sucking measures were noted among treatment groups. Differences in progression time to total oral feedings and weight gain favored the sweet-pacifier group but were not statistically significant.
CONCLUSIONS
Oral stimulation of gavage-fed, preterm infants during a 2-week hospitalization was not sufficient to elicit a significant improvement in growth efficiency, progression to total oral feedings, or sucking maturation. Additional studies may show a beneficial effect of chemosensory stimulation in preterm infants.
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