跳转到主要内容

Kinesthetic stimulation for preventing apnea in preterm infants

Lying preterm babies on oscillating mattresses has not been shown to help prevent apnea. Physical stimulation arouses babies experiencing apnea (episodes where breathing stops), and babies still in utero are naturally stimulated by their mothers' movements. Thus, it has been thought that keeping the baby moving might prevent apnea and promote growth and development. Oscillating (moving) mattresses have sometimes been used for babies born too early (preterm) who are at risk of apnea. However, the review found that this has not been shown to be effective.

研究背景

Recurrent apnea is common in preterm infants, particularly at very early gestational ages. These episodes of loss of effective breathing can lead to hypoxemia and bradycardia, which may be severe enough to require resuscitation including use of positive pressure ventilation or other treatments. Physical stimulation is often used to restart breathing and it is possible that repeated stimulation, such as with an oscillating mattress (kinesthetic stimulation), might prevent apnea and its consequences.

研究目的

To determine the effect of prophylactic kinesthetic stimulation on apnea and bradycardia and use of intermittent positive pressure ventilation (IPPV) in preterm infants at risk for apnea?

检索策略

The standard search strategy of the Cochrane Neonatal Review Group was used. This included searches of the Oxford Database of Perinatal trials, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library, Issue 4, 2009), MEDLINE (1966 to October 2009), EMBASE, CINAHL (1982 to October 2009), previous reviews including cross references, abstracts, conferences and symposia proceedings, expert informants, journal hand searching mainly in the English language.

纳入排除标准

All trials in preterm infants at risk of developing clinical apnea which utilized random or quasi-random allocation to treatment with an oscillating mattress (or other forms of repetitive kinesthetic stimulation) or control, were eligible.

资料收集与分析

Standard methods of the Cochrane Collaboration and its Neonatal Review Group were used with separate evaluation of trial quality and data extraction by each author and synthesis of the data using relative risk.

主要结果

Three trials enrolling a total of 154 babies were included in this review. There was no evidence of effect on short-term outcomes (apnea /bradycardia, IVH, use of IPPV, sleep/wake cycles and neurological status at discharge) or long-term outcomes (in one trial - growth and development to one year).

作者结论

Implications for practice. Prophylactic use of kinesthetic stimulation cannot be recommended to reduce apnea/bradycardia in preterm infants.

Implications for research. There are currently no clear research questions regarding prophylactic use of kinesthetic stimulation to prevent apnea in preterm infants.

引用文献
Osborn DA, Henderson-Smart DJ. Kinesthetic stimulation for preventing apnea in preterm infants. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2002, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD000373. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD000373.

我们的Cookie使用

我们使用必要的cookie来使我们的网站工作。我们还希望设置可选的分析cookie,以帮助我们进行改进。除非您启用它们,否则我们不会设置可选的cookie。使用此工具将在您的设备上设置一个cookie来记住您的偏好。您随时可以随时通过单击每个页面页脚中的“Cookies设置”链接来更改您的Cookie首选项。
有关我们使用cookie的更多详细信息,请参阅我们的Cookies页面

接受全部
配置