High Risk Pregnancy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pilot Study: Ultrasonic Evaluation of the Development of the Fetal Upper Aerodigestive Tract: Establishing Clinical Indicators of Deglutitive Function
This study will establish a database of fetal movements associated with feeding. It will use
information obtained from standard fetal ultrasound procedures to identify and measure the
growth of the baby's face, lips, tongue, jaw, throat and airway. Fetal movements involved in
breathing, sucking and swallowing will be recorded on videotape. This study may provide
information that will:
increase knowledge about how swallowing develops in the fetus;
help explain why some babies have difficulty sucking and swallowing at birth; help predict
what babies are at increased risk for feeding problems; and help design better ways to
manage feeding difficulties in babies.
Pregnant women scheduled for ultrasound examination at the National Naval Medical Center in
Bethesda, Maryland, or Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C., are eligible for
this study. Mothers will fill out a questionnaire providing general medical and health
information. For the ultrasound procedure, a transducer (a small, wand-like device) is moved
across the belly to produce images of the fetus. When the baby is awake and swallowing,
images of the mouth, throat and air passages will be recorded on videotape. The movements
associated with feeding-breathing, sucking, yawning and swallowing-will then be measured to
document how swallowing develops.
When the baby is born, researchers will review the medical chart for any findings relevant
to this study. One to 2 weeks after delivery, the mother will be interviewed by telephone
about the baby's feeding skills. Follow-up visits at 4 and 8 weeks after the birth will
include observation of the baby's sucking and swallowing and an ultrasound examination, in
which the transducer is held under the baby's chin during swallowing.
Babies who show signs of slow sucking or swallowing development will have a follow-up
examination at ages 4 and 8 months. Follow-up visits at 4 and 8 months after the birth will
include observation of the baby's sucking and swallowing and an ultrasound examination, in
which the transducer is held under the baby's chin during swallowing.
The normal term infant at birth is able to suck-swallow in a coordinated manner sufficient
for nutritional intake and protection of the upper airway. The integrity of this post-natal
behavior is dependent on intrauterine growth and function of the orofacial, pharyngeal and
laryngeal structures of the upper aerodigestive system. The integrity of these structures
not only ensures functional postnatal ingestive skills, but also contributes to the prenatal
development of the gastrointestinal tract, regulation of amniotic fluid and composition, and
recirculation of solutes. This developing system thus has importance in both fetal and
neonatal well-being. However, few biometric or biophysical data exist detailing the normal
patterns of growth and development of the aerodigestive structures in the human fetus.
Further, factors that contribute to abnormal fetal and neonatal deglutitive responses are
not fully known.
The purpose of this study is to establish the first anthropomorphic database on the
development of aerodigestive structures in the fetus and, through sonographic biophysical
profiles, examine the significance of fetal ingestive behaviors as predictors of postnatal
feeding skills in at-risk infants. A detailed cross-sectional study of the development of
the fetal upper aerodigestive tract and analysis of the progression of deglutitive skills
over the course of gestation may lead to the early identification of factors contributing to
neonatal swallowing dysfunction and other developmental delays. These data may provide
insights into underlying intrauterine conditions associated with infant feeding
difficulties. Resulting two- and three-dimensional ultrasonic data on the structural
development of the upper aerodigestive system, coupled with biophysical data may be useful
predictors of neonates at risk for nutritional and pulmonary sequelae. Further, sequential
indices of normal swallowing-sucking skills may guide post-natal decisions for feeding
"readiness" and advance the care of the premature, at-risk infant.
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