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Premature Newborns clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06200662 Not yet recruiting - Premature Newborns Clinical Trials

Pain Relief in Premature Newborns Through Maternal Intervention During Venipuncture

PREMAMANDOL
Start date: February 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Extremely premature newborn infants (ELNs) admitted to hospital are exposed to stressful and painful stimuli, and often to maternal separation, which can affect their long-term neurological development. Child- and family-centred developmental care (CFDC) in neonatology aims to adapt the hospital environment to the needs of the child, support the continued presence of the family and help to improve their future. Specific assessment and appropriate analgesic treatment are therefore priorities for preserving the well-being and cerebral development of this population, which is particularly vulnerable to pain. Pain relief for certain procedures necessary for the care of newborn babies, such as venipuncture (PV), remains inadequate. Venipuncture is a common procedure in the first few weeks of life for very premature newborns. Its analgesic treatment is based on non-medicinal strategies largely carried out in the nurse's own role: non-nutritive suctioning combined with the administration of a sugar solution and wrapping. In line with the SDCEF philosophy, and reinforced by the "zero separation" concept, parental involvement in the treatment of their newborn's pain becomes natural and fundamental. A number of studies have shown the benefits of parents' presence and participation through specific isolated analgesic actions. Skin- to-skin contact (PAP) is one of these and has multiple benefits for the newborn. However, in practice, when a PV is necessary for a very premature baby, its use as a pain-relieving strategy is hampered by a number of obstacles. As NN are naturally oriented towards the maternal voice, using it is a new approach to analgesia. In an innovative study carried out in a single centre, direct maternal voice contact, in addition to the usual non- pharmacological analgesic strategies, reduced the NN's pain, without completely eliminating it during heel sampling (a skin incision known to be more painful than a PV). This analgesic strategy should therefore be combined with other non-pharmacological strategies, taking advantage of all maternal skills.

NCT ID: NCT05820386 Not yet recruiting - Premature Newborns Clinical Trials

Skin-to-skin Contact During the Transfer From the Delivery Room to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: Impact on Very Preterm Infants and Their Parents

TRANSPAPNEO
Start date: May 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Developmental care are recognized as a standard of care for preterm infants in neonatal intensive care units. Regular skin-to skin contacts during the neonatal stay show short and long-term beneficial effects on preterm infants and their parents. Skin-to-skin contact provides hemodynamic and thermal stability in preterm infants. Regarding parents, skin-to-skin contact sustains the parental bonding, and reduces stress and anxiety related to hospitalization. As a result, early skin-to-skin contact has been associated with an improvement of neurological outcome in very preterm infants. Thermal stability is crucial during the first hour of life in preterm infants. A temperature at admission in the neonatal intensive care unit below 36.5°C or above 37.2°C has been associated with an increase in neonatal morbidity and mortality. Early skin-to-skin contact between a newborn and his/her mother in the delivery room significantly decreases the occurrence of hypothermia below 35.5°C. The practice of skin-to-skin transfer from the delivery room is emerging in France. Pilot studies have been carried out by French neonatal teams that showed the feasibility of this practice in late-preterm, near-term and term infants. Although skin-to-skin contact routinely involves very preterm infants in neonatal intensive care units worldwide, the feasibility and safety of skin-to-skin contact during the transfer from delivery room to the neonatal unit is poorly documented in very preterm infants. Previous data of our team showed that transfer of preterm infants with non-invasive ventilation using skin-to-skin contact was feasible and safe but concerns emerged about the thermal conservation during the procedure. The main hypothesis of this study is that skin-to skin contact during the transfer from the delivery room to the neonatal intensive care unit could prevent heat losses in preterm infants as well as the transfer in incubator. Another hypothesis is that very early skin-to-skin contact could positively influence the neonatal course and the parental experience in the neonatal care unit.

NCT ID: NCT02787980 Completed - Premature Newborns Clinical Trials

Dosage of Serum Tryptase Levels in a Population of Premature Newborns to Evaluate Mast Cell Activity

Start date: October 12, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Compare serum tryptase levels of premature babies (<37 weeks of amenorrhea) to children born at full term. Study the evolution of serum tryptase levels in premature babies(<37 weeks of amenorrhea). Study the relationship between the onset of infectious complications, mainly the type of necrotizing enterocolitis seen in premature babies (<37 weeks of amenorrhea) and the evolution profile of serum tryptase levels.

NCT ID: NCT01944696 Recruiting - Hyperbilirubinemia Clinical Trials

Cycled Phototherapy: A Safer Effective Treatment for Small Premature Infants?

Start date: March 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cycled (intermittent) phototherapy will be compared to continuous (uninterrupted) phototherapy in the treatment of hyperbilirubinemia (newborn jaundice) in extremely low birth weight newborns in a pilot randomized controlled trial. Hypothesis: Cycled phototherapy (PT) will provide the same benefits as continuous phototherapy in extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants without the risks that have been associated with continuous phototherapy.