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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05333575
Other study ID # SelcukUniversity
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date December 2, 2020
Est. completion date April 4, 2022

Study information

Verified date April 2022
Source Selcuk University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In the study, lullabies and classical music played to preterm babies during orogastric tube feeding; It will be tried to determine the effect on cerebral oxygenation level, vital signs and comfort levels.


Description:

In the literature, there are many studies on prematurity pain and its relief. Although the vital signs and comfort levels of infants were examined in many applications for infants hospitalized in the neonatal intensive care unit, no study was found in which the cerebral oxygenation levels of infants were evaluated by NIRS by listening to lullabies and classical music to premature infants. There is no study in the literature examining cerebral oxygenation, vital signs and comfort parameters together during orogastric tube feeding, which is frequently used in preterm infants. For this reason, in this study, lullabies and classical music played to preterm babies during orogastric tube feeding; It will be tried to determine the effect on cerebral oxygenation level, vital signs and comfort levels. It is thought that the study will present new data to the literature and will lead many researches.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 51
Est. completion date April 4, 2022
Est. primary completion date December 15, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 28 Weeks to 34 Weeks
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Being at 28-34 weeks of gestation, - Stability (in terms of cerebral oxygenation, pain and vital signs) during enrollment, - Not having any additional diagnosis other than the diagnosis of prematurity, - Indication of bolus feeding with an orogastric tube, Exclusion Criteria: - Congenital anomaly in the baby - Diagnosed hearing impairment in the baby - Having a history of an invasive procedure (such as a surgical operation) that will disrupt the baby's long-term comfort and cause pain - The baby is receiving oxygen therapy or the baby is on mechanical ventilation - Any history of disease affecting cerebral oxygenation (such as intraventricular hemorrhage, neonatal convulsions).

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Lullaby
The mothers in this group were asked to sing a lullaby while their babies were fed with an orogastric tube. Mothers were released on lullabies. They were encouraged to sing the lullaby they knew or loved the most. The mother was given a sound decibel meter. Mothers were asked to do an application before going to the baby. It was taught that the number of sound decibels should not exceed 40 decibels while singing a lullaby. Later, the mother was taken to the baby's incubator at feeding time. She was seated in a chair. The working status of the decibel meter was checked and given to the mother. When the feeding started, the mother started singing lullabies and continued to sing until the feeding was finished. Attention was paid to aseptic techniques during all procedures. A single mother was asked to sing a lullaby at each feeding, and the baby of the mother who sang only a lullaby was included in the study.
Classic music
The babies in this group were given classical music recitals during feeding. The classical music piece Mozart-Baby Smart was preferred because it was seen to be used in the literature (Keidar 2014). Mozart-Baby Smart was loaded into the music player by the researcher before the feeding process. Before feeding, the decibel meter was disinfected by surface disinfectant and placed on sterile sponge in an incubator 10 cm away from the baby's head. The music player was turned on, not exceeding 40 decibels, by adjusting the decibel meter at the time of starting the feeding, and classical music was continued during the feeding. When the feeding was finished, the music player was turned off and the incubator was taken out. Attention was paid to acetic techniques during all procedures. Ambient sounds were tried to be controlled as much as possible so that the baby would not be affected by different sounds when listening to classical music.

Locations

Country Name City State
Turkey Selcuk University Konya
Turkey Sibel Kucukoglu Konya

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Selcuk University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Turkey, 

References & Publications (7)

Alipour Z, Eskandari N, Ahmari Tehran H, Eshagh Hossaini SK, Sangi S. Effects of music on physiological and behavioral responses of premature infants: a randomized controlled trial. Complement Ther Clin Pract. 2013 Aug;19(3):128-32. doi: 10.1016/j.ctcp.2013.02.007. Epub 2013 May 9. — View Citation

Azarmnejad E, Sarhangi F, Javadi M, Rejeh N. The Effect of Mother's Voice on Arterial Blood Sampling Induced Pain in Neonates Hospitalized in Neonate Intensive Care Unit. Glob J Health Sci. 2015 Apr 19;7(6):198-204. doi: 10.5539/gjhs.v7n6p198. — View Citation

Caparros-Gonzalez RA, de la Torre-Luque A, Diaz-Piedra C, Vico FJ, Buela-Casal G. Listening to Relaxing Music Improves Physiological Responses in Premature Infants: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Adv Neonatal Care. 2018 Feb;18(1):58-69. doi: 10.1097/ANC.0000000000000448. — View Citation

Kahraman A, Basbakkal Z, Yalaz M, 2014. Yenidogan Konfor Davranis Ölçegi'nin Türkçe geçerlik ve güvenirligi. Uluslararasi Hakemli Hemsirelik Arastirmalari Dergisi, 1, 2, 1-11.

Keidar HR, Mandel D, Mimouni FB, Lubetzky R. Bach music in preterm infants: no 'Mozart effect' on resting energy expenditure. J Perinatol. 2014 Feb;34(2):153-5. doi: 10.1038/jp.2013.138. Epub 2013 Nov 14. — View Citation

Loewy J, Stewart K, Dassler AM, Telsey A, Homel P. The effects of music therapy on vital signs, feeding, and sleep in premature infants. Pediatrics. 2013 May;131(5):902-18. doi: 10.1542/peds.2012-1367. Epub 2013 Apr 15. — View Citation

van Dijk M, Roofthooft DW, Anand KJ, Guldemond F, de Graaf J, Simons S, de Jager Y, van Goudoever JB, Tibboel D. Taking up the challenge of measuring prolonged pain in (premature) neonates: the COMFORTneo scale seems promising. Clin J Pain. 2009 Sep;25(7):607-16. doi: 10.1097/AJP.0b013e3181a5b52a. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Newborn Information Form This form was developed by the researcher using the literature (Loewy et al 2013, Caparros-Gonzalez et al 2018, Azarmnejad et al 2015, Alipour et al 2013). The form was composed of questions including introductory information about the baby, gestational age, postnatal age, gender, birth weight (gr), weight on the day of the intervention, type of delivery, 1st and 5th min apgar score. First measurement - Before intervention
Primary Regional brain oxygen saturation (rSO2) levels The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as baby's rSO2 levels were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. First measurement - one minute before the baby is fed
Primary Heart rate (minute) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as heart rate (min) were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. First measurement - one minute before the baby is fed
Primary Oxygen saturation (%SpO2) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as Oxygen saturation (%SpO2) were recorded.. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. First measurement - one minute before the baby is fed
Primary Body temperature (°C) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as baby's body temperature (°C) were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. First measurement - one minute before the baby is fed
Primary Respiratory rate (min) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as baby's respiratory rate (min) were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. First measurement - one minute before the baby is fed
Primary COMFORTneo Scale The scale is a Likert type scale developed to determine the pain, distress, sedation and comfort needs of newborns followed in the intensive care unit. Ambuel et al. created the Comfort Scale in 1992 to evaluate the distress of children receiving mechanical ventilator support in pediatric intensive care units. Van Dijk et al. revised the scale in 2009 and made the validity and reliability of the COMFORTneo scale only to measure newborn behavior without vital parameters. The Turkish validity and reliability of the scale was performed by Kahraman et al. in 2014. The lowest score that can be obtained from the Newborn Comfort Behavior Scale is 6, and the highest score is 30. High scores indicate that the baby is not comfortable and needs interventions to provide comfort. First measurement - one minute before the baby is fed
Secondary Regional brain oxygen saturation (rSO2) levels The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as Oxygen saturation (%SpO2) were recorded.. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. Second measurement - immediately after feeding
Secondary Heart rate (minute) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as heart rate (min) were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. Second measurement - immediately after feeding
Secondary Oxygen saturation (%SpO2) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as Oxygen saturation (%SpO2) were recorded.. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. Second measurement - immediately after feeding
Secondary Body temperature (°C) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as baby's body temperature (°C) were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. Second measurement - immediately after feeding
Secondary Respiratory rate (min) The form prepared by the researcher; It was prepared in such a way that physiological parameters such as baby's respiratory rate (min) were recorded. The form is designed to record twice, 1 minute before the baby is fed and immediately after the feeding is completed. Second measurement - immediately after feeding
Secondary COMFORTneo Scale The scale is a Likert type scale developed to determine the pain, distress, sedation and comfort needs of newborns followed in the intensive care unit. Ambuel et al. created the Comfort Scale in 1992 to evaluate the distress of children receiving mechanical ventilator support in pediatric intensive care units. Van Dijk et al. revised the scale in 2009 and made the validity and reliability of the COMFORTneo scale only to measure newborn behavior without vital parameters. The Turkish validity and reliability of the scale was performed by Kahraman et al. in 2014. The lowest score that can be obtained from the Newborn Comfort Behavior Scale is 6, and the highest score is 30. High scores indicate that the baby is not comfortable and needs interventions to provide comfort. Second measurement - immediately after feeding
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