Premature Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Neurodevelopment and Experience: Behavior, Quantitative EEG and MRI
Premature infants born between 28 and 33 weeks’ gestation often have significant brain damage. Brain damage can be caused by the much greater stimulation the infant receives in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) as compared to the mother’s womb. This study will test the effectiveness of specialized and individualized NICU developmental care in preventing brain damage.
From 28 to 33 weeks' gestation, significant neurological reorganization takes place,
initiating fetal behavioral individuality and capacity for extrauterine survival. Infants
born at this transitional stage exhibit unexpectedly significant brain dysfunction as they
develop and age. The majority of these infants will develop psychomotor, cognitive, and
attentional function deficits as well as emotional vulnerability and substandard school
performance. Research suggests that these symptoms are due to a central deficit in frontal
lobe processing of complex information. This central deficit may result from increased
vulnerability of cerebral white matter during the last trimester of gestation, its phase of
most rapid development. Persistent stress due to inappropriate sensory stimulation may
contribute to alteration of early brain structure and function. This study will identify
specific adaptations of the preterm brain to the transient NICU experience in order to
estimate the potential of such experience in remodeling neuroanatomical structure and
neurodevelopmental function. Further, the study will evaluate a program of specialized
developmental care within the NICU environment.
The study’s specialized developmental care model views the preterm infant as a fetus and
attempts to reduce the discrepancy between the technological hospital environment and the
mother’s womb. A developmental specialist team will support the NICU caregivers. The
developmental specialists will observe the infant’s behavior and use these observations to
formulate descriptive neurobehavioral reports and suggestions, to structure caregiving
procedures in coordination with the infant’s sleep/wake cycle, and to maintain the infant’s
well-regulated behavioral balance. The goal of the intervention is to promote the infant’s
strengths while reducing the infant’s self-regulatory vulnerability.
Sixty medically healthy infants born between 28 and 33 weeks’ gestation will be randomly
assigned to standard NICU care or specialized developmental care. Preterm infants will be
compared to 30 healthy full term infants. All infants will be assessed at 42 weeks'
postconceptional age in three neurodevelopmental domains: neurobehavioral function,
neuroelectrophysiological function, and neuroanatomic structure. Assessments will focus on
distinct regions of the brain (occipital and frontal lobes) and the corpus callosum (which
connects the right and left sides of the brain).
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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