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A New Bottle Design Decreases Hypoxemic Episodes during Feeding in Preterm Infants. | LitMetric

A New Bottle Design Decreases Hypoxemic Episodes during Feeding in Preterm Infants.

Int J Pediatr

Departamento de Neonatología, Hospital Italiano de San Justo Agustín Rocca, Avenue Presidente Perón 2231 San Justo, La Matanza, Provincia de Buenos Aires (B1754AZK), Argentina.

Published: August 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Oxygen saturation levels in preterm infants are lower during bottle feeding compared to breastfeeding.
  • A study compared two bottle systems to assess their impact on oxygen saturation (SpO2) and oral feeding efficiency in healthy preterm infants prior to discharge.
  • Results showed that the new bottle design, which mimics breastfeeding, led to significantly higher SpO2 and milk intake rates than the standard bottle.

Article Abstract

Oxygen saturation is lower during bottle feeding than during breastfeeding in preterm infants. Our objective was to compare two different bottle systems in healthy preterm infants before discharge in terms of SpO(2) and oral feeding efficiency (rate of milk intake). Infants without supplement oxygen needs were evaluated twice on the same day during two consecutive feeds, by the same nurse. Infants served as their own controls for comparison of two systems of bottles, the order of which was randomized. The new bottle's nipple design mimics mom's breast in shape and feel, and the bottle vents to air when the child sucks on the nipple. The other system was the hospital's standard plastic bottle with silicone nipple. The rate of milk intake was calculated as the total volume transferred minus volume lost divided by time of feeding, mL/min. Thirty-four infants (BW: 1, 163 ± 479.1 g) were studied at 35.4 ± 1.3 weeks after-conception. SpO(2) was significantly higher in infants fed with the new bottle design. Milk intake rate was significantly higher with the new bottle than with the standard bottle design. The new bottle design improves oral feeding performance in preterm infants near to discharge when compared to that of a standard bottle.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3385645PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/531608DOI Listing

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