Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02366936 |
Other study ID # |
Pro00060408 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 2015 |
Est. completion date |
June 2016 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2017 |
Source |
Duke University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of the Tortle Midliner
positioning system in prevention and/or treatment of dolichocephaly, which can develop in
preterm infants during the hospital stay.
Specific Aim: Determine if the use of the Tortle Midliner is a more effective prevention and
treatment strategy for dolichocephaly than current standard of care intervention in the Duke
Intensive Care Nursery (ICN).
Description:
Dolichocephaly (or positional scaphocephaly) is defined as a boat-shaped or elongated
anterior-posterior axis as a result of skull flattening during side-to-side head positioning
of infants during hospitalization. This deformity often takes place in preterm infants <32
weeks because the preferred position is sidelying or prone for improved ease of containment,
decreased reflux episodes, and decreased apnea/bradycardia. Supine positioning with head in
midline is recommended to decrease the occurrence of this deformity, but maintaining midline
is difficult as a result of gravity and preterm hypotonia. Developmental positioning through
use of special positioning aids and caregiver education are common interventions used to
address dolichocephaly. Dolichocephaly may resolve prior to hospital discharge, but in some
cases infants are discharged home with the deformity.
Despite documentation of dolichocephaly in preterm infants for nearly three decades, few
studies report how often it occurs or the rate of resolution with intervention. Prematurity
appears to be the most common predetermining factor. Preterm infants may experience a limited
variety of positions due to autonomic instability or critical respiratory status. These
infants are often positioned in prone to improve oxygenation and decrease incidence of
reflux. Furthermore, the preterm infant demonstrates proximal hypotonia, causing the head to
fall to either side with gravity while in supine. Bilateral flattening of the lateral skull
develops as a result of the weight of the head and the pressure of gravity.
The correlation between low birth weight and head flattening has been established in the
literature. Researchers suggested that the deformity was preventable with the use of air or
water pillows. Limited emphasis was placed on body position (i.e. supine, sidelying, or
prone) in these articles. Since this period of time, the use of positioning aids and
developmental positioning has been used to decrease the occurrence of dolichocephaly during
hospitalization. Despite these interventions, some infants have dolichocephaly at hospital
discharge.
The long-term consequences of dolichocephaly are not fully known, but it has been correlated
with delayed reaching skills, tightness in the spinal extensors and scapular retractors, and
development of motor asymmetries. Other long-term effects of dolichocephaly have been
evaluated minimally. Elliman's study demonstrated comparable developmental quotients at age 3
when comparing a preterm group to controls. Kitchen and colleagues reported no differences in
IQ at a 7-year follow up. Mewes and colleagues, however, suggest that the shift in cortical
structures, caused by dolichocephaly may affect the preterm brain, which continues to develop
rapidly after birth. Since the American Academy of Pediatrics established the widely
successful and influential "Back to Sleep Campaign" in 1992, many studies have established
the relationship between prevalence and long-term neuro-developmental outcomes of preterm
infants with plagiocephaly - asymmetric flattening of the skull due to head preference - but
there are no studies that determine the long-term neuro-developmental outcomes of preterm
infants with dolichocephaly. Increased time spent supine, coupled with the fact that nearly
half of preterm infants leave the hospital with a head preference, calls for updated
long-term study of the effect of dolichocephaly specifically on neuro-developmental outcomes.