Maturation of the rectoanal inhibitory reflex in very premature infants

2003 ◽  
Vol 143 (5) ◽  
pp. 630-633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fleur de Lorijn ◽  
T.I Omari ◽  
J.H Kok ◽  
J.A.J.M Taminiau ◽  
M.A Benninga
Author(s):  
Margaret A. Lafferty ◽  
Amy Mackley ◽  
Pam Green ◽  
Deborah Ottenthal ◽  
Robert Locke ◽  
...  

Objective The study aimed to assess in a prospective randomized study the effect of Mozart's music on time to regain birth weight (BW) and development of oral feeding skills in babies born between 280/7 and 316/7 weeks of gestation. Study Design Healthy premature infants born between 280/7 and 316/7 completed weeks of gestation were randomized within 3 days of birth to either music or no music exposure. Infants in the music group were exposed to Mozart's double piano sonata twice per day for 14 days. The primary outcome was time to regain birth weight. The secondary outcome was development of oral feeding skills as evaluated by a speech/language pathologist blinded to the intervention. We hypothesized that exposure to Mozart's double piano sonata would decrease time to regain BW and improve feeding skills. A total of 32 newborns were needed to detect a 3-day difference in time to regain BW. Results Forty infants were enrolled and randomized. There were no significant differences between the two groups regarding the time to regain BW (p = 0.181) and the time to achievement of full oral feeds (p = 0.809). Conclusion Exposure to Mozart's double piano sonata for 14 days after birth did not significantly improve time to regain BW or time to achieve full oral feedings in very premature infants. It is possible that Mozart's music has no effect or that the duration of music exposure was not sufficient to have a physiologic effect on growth and oral feeding skills. Key Points


Author(s):  
Daniela Pop ◽  
Simona Tătar ◽  
Otilia Fufezan ◽  
Dorin Farcău

Background. Abdominal ultrasound and anorectal manometry are part of the investigations used to assess children with functional constipation. This study aimed at assessing the changes in the characteristics of the rectoanal inhibitory reflex (RAIR) in children with functional constipation and correlating them with the dimensions of the rectum, measured by abdominal ultrasound. A secondary objective was to compare the rectum size in children with and without constipation. Method. We retrospectively reviewed the clinical data and investigations results of 51 children (mean age±standard deviation (SD) =5.8±3.5 years) with functional constipation who came to our clinic between January 2013 and February 2020. The assessment of these patients included both the assessment of the transverse diameter of the rectal ampulla by abdominal ultrasound and anorectal manometry. The studied parameters of RAIR were: the minimal volume of air necessary to induce RAIR, in all the patients with functional constipation, and in 20 of them, relaxation time, latency and relaxation percentage. A control group was formed of 27 children (mean age±DS=5.1±4 years) without digestive diseases and with normal intestinal transit, who were assessed by abdominal ultrasound. Results. The mean value ±SD of the volume of air necessary to induce RAIR was 21.9±12.1 cm3 air. There was no correlation between the rectum transverse diameter and the minimal air volume that triggered RAIR (r=-0.01, p=0.94). The mean value ±SD of the transverse diameter of the rectum in patients with functional constipation was 39±14 mm, and in children without constipation 26±6 mm (p<0.05). The mean duration of the symptoms in children with functional constipation was 2.8 years. Conclusions. There were no correlations between the volume of air that induced the RAIR and the transverse diameter of the rectum in children with functional constipation. The transverse diameter of the rectum was increased in children with long-term functional constipation.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. A52-A52

...from therapeutic nihilism based on the prevailing belief that any measures taken to increase the survival rate [of very premature infants] would result in increasing numbers of handicapped children who would be a burden to their families, to overzealous intervention which suggests it is mothers not infants whose interests should be ignored.


2006 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 231-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Jaillard ◽  
Benoît Larrue ◽  
Thameur Rakza ◽  
Eric Magnenant ◽  
Henri Warembourg ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 451-457 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toong C. Lee ◽  
Bruce G. Charles ◽  
Glen J. Harte ◽  
Peter H. Gray ◽  
Peter A. Steer ◽  
...  

Background Midazolam is used widely as a sedative to facilitate mechanical ventilation. This prospective study investigated the population pharmacokinetics of midazolam in very premature infants. Methods Midazolam (100 microg/kg) was administered as a rapid intravenous bolus dose every 4-6 h to 60 very premature neonates with a mean (range) gestational age of 27 weeks (24-31 weeks), a birth weight of 965 g (523-1,470 g), and an age of 4.5 days (2-15 days). A median (range) of four (one to four) blood samples, 0.2 ml each, were drawn at random times after the first dose or during continuous treatment, and concentrations of midazolam in serum were assayed by high-performance liquid chromatography. A population analysis was conducted using a two-compartment pharmacokinetic model using the NONMEM program. Results Average parameter values (interpatient percent coefficient of variation) for infants with birth weights 1,000 g or less were total systemic clearance (Cl(T)) = 0.783 ml/min (83%), intercompartmental clearance (Cl(Q)) = 6.53 ml/min (116%), volume of distribution of the central compartment (V1) = 473 ml (70%), and volume of distribution of the peripheral compartment (V2) = 513 ml (146%). For infants with birth weights more than 1,000 g they were as follows: Cl(T) = 1.24 ml/min (78%), Cl(Q) = 9.82 ml/min (98%), V1 = 823 ml (43%), and V2 = 1,040 ml (193%). The intrapatient variability (percent coefficient of variation) in the data was 4.5% at the mean concentration midazolam in serum of 121 ng/mL. Conclusions Serum concentration-time data were used in modeling the population pharmacokinetics of midazolam in very premature, ventilated neonates. Clearance of midazolam was markedly decreased compared with previous data from term infants and older patients. Infants weighing less than 1,000 g at birth had significantly lower clearance than those weighing more than 1,000 g.


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