The main goal of this study is to quantitatively assess the sucking and feeding activity of infants at high risk of neurological impairment (preterm infants and term infants at risk of abnormal neurodevelopment) during oral sucking and feeding and correlate it with their underlying neurological impairment for the early diagnosis of brain injury.
This research will address the current lack of objective tools for the reliable assessment of oral sucking and feeding in clinical practice, and the insufficient evidence that relates early measures of abnormal sucking activity with the underlying neurological impairment. The main goal of this study is to quantitatively assess the sucking and feeding activity of infants at high risk of neurological impairment (preterm infants and term infants at risk of abnormal neurodevelopment) during oral sucking and feeding and correlate it with their underlying neurological impairment for the early diagnosis of brain injury. We aim to study three groups of infants who are inpatients on the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Boston Children's Hospital (BCH), the NICU or Newborn Nursery at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), the Special Care Nursery (SCN) or Newborn Nursery at Winchester Hospital as follows: (i) group A consisting of preterm infants (gestational age of \<37 weeks), (ii) group B consisting of term infants admitted to the NICU at BCH and BIDMC for therapeutic hypothermia who are at risk of developing hypoxic ischemic injury (HIE); admitted with concern for neonatal stroke; seizures of unknown etiology; and those admitted to the NICU, SCN or Newborn Nursery at BCH, BIDMC and Winchester Hospital at risk of abnormal neurodevelopment such as those with hypoglycemia or neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) and; (iii) group C consisting of healthy term infants admitted to the NICU, SCN or nursery who had an initial uncomplicated postnatal course that will serve as the control group. Additionally, those infants who have MRI of the brain for any reason during the course of their hospital admission will also be included in the study and allocated to the appropriate group accordingly.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
16
The study will record the sucking activity of the hospitalized infants over time, from their first oral sucking session including non-nutritive and nutritive sucking, until discharge, using an FDA-approved device that equips a typical bottle and nipple commonly used in the NICU with a non-invasive sensor to measure sucking activity. Each infant's nutritive and non-nutritive sucking patterns will be measured, and will comprise the 'sucking session' conducted with the bottle sensor.
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Difference in sucking activity of infants with brain injury
Primary outcome will be an assessment of the sucking activity of infants with brain injury and infants without brain injury, using an FDA-approved device for sucking assessment.
Time frame: Approximately one year through study completion
Sucking activity of infants and brain connectivity
The functional and structural connectivity of the brain areas involved in sucking and feeding in infants with brain injury will be assessed reviewing the results of clinically ordered neuroimaging and neurodevelopmental tests.
Time frame: Approximately three years through study completion
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