The aim of this study was to define quantitative measures for assessing the integration and maturation of suck and swallow rhythms in preterm infants as they relate to each other. Fourteen preterm infants (eight males, six females; gestational age range 26 to 32 weeks) with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and an age-matched cohort of 20 infants (10 males, 10 females; gestational age range 26 to 33 weeks) without BPD were studied weekly from time of initiation of oral feeding using simultaneous recordings of nipple and pharyngeal pressure. The integration of suck and swallow rhythms was quantified by using the coefficient of variation (COV) of the suck-swallow dyad interval.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective of this study was to develop a method to use digital signal processing (DSP) technology to describe quantitatively and statistically swallow-associated sounds in preterm infants and to use this method to analyze changes as infants mature. Twelve recordings of accelerometric and physiological data on bottle-feeding preterm infants between 32 and 39 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA) were analyzed. Cervical auscultation was performed using an accelerometer attached over the larynx.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo quantify parameters of rhythmic suckle feeding in healthy term infants and to assess developmental changes during the first month of life, we recorded pharyngeal and nipple pressure in 16 infants at 1 to 4 days of age and again at 1 month. Over the first month of life in term infants, sucks and swallows become more rapid and increasingly organized into runs. Suck rate increased from 55/minute in the immediate postnatal period to 70/minute by the end of the first month (p<0.
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