Preterm Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Skin-to-skin Contact in NICU, Caregiving Touch and Neural Correlates of Slow Stroking Touch Stimulation in Preterm Infants. A MRI Study
Preterm (PT) infants spend their first weeks of life in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) where receive little affective physical contact, which plays a crucial role in brain development. Evidence indicates that skin-to-skin contact (SSC) has a positive effect on infants' neurophysiological and behavioral adjustment to postnatal life. Moreover, caregiving touch during early interactions is related to sensitive caregiving behavior, which in turn is associated with brain connectivity in full-term (FT) infants. Despite the importance of both SSC and caregiving touch for infant development little is known about the neural correlates of early physical contact in PT infants. Using MRI the project aims to investigate the association between brain responses to gentle skin stroking at 2 months examining the effects of: (1) the birth status (PT vs. FT); (2) the duration of SSC in NICU; (3) the caregiving touch in the home environment and during mother-infant interaction. The investigators hypothesized: (1) differences in the brain responses in the above mentioned ROIs to gentle skin stroking, a type of tactile stimulus associated with affectionate touch and social interaction26, between FT infants and PT infants: (2) that above mentioned putative differences would be mitigate by duration of SSC during the NICU in PT infants; (3) an association between CT/sensitive caregiving behaviors both in the home environment and during face-to-face interaction and brain response in the above mentioned ROIs to gentle skin stroking in PT and FT infants.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | September 4, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | April 4, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 6 Weeks to 10 Weeks |
Eligibility | Preterm infants (clinical sample) Inclusion Criteria: - Gestational age (GA) < or = 37 weeks - age-appropriate neurological examination Exclusion Criteria: - presence of perinatal injuries/genetic syndromes - documented neurological pathology - presence of sensory deficits Full-term infants (control sample) Inclusion Criteria: - Gestational age (GA) > 37 weeks - age-appropriate neurological examination Exclusion Criteria: - presence of perinatal injuries/complications - presence of sensory deficits Inclusion criteria for mothers (preterm and full-term): - Age over 18 years - Good comprehension of Italian language - No documented cognitive/psychiatric impairments - No documented psychotropic medication during pregnancy - No single-parent families |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Italy | Associalzione La Nostra Famiglia - IRCCS Eugenio Medea | Bosisio Parini | Lecco |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
IRCCS Eugenio Medea |
Italy,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Insular cortex and somatosensory cortex activation in preterm and full-term infants | Significant differences in mean BOLD signal magnitude in the insular cortex and in somatosensory cortex between preterm infants and full-term infants in the slow skin stroking experimental task during the fMRI session | experimental MRI scanning visit occurring when the infants is 2 months-old (Corrected Age for preterm infants) | |
Secondary | Skin-to-skin contact in NICU and insular cortex/somatosensory cortex activation in preterm infants | Correlation between the duration of skin-to-skin contact during the NICU stay measured by self-report diaries and mean BOLD signal magnitude in the insular cortex and in somatosensory cortex (in the slow skin stroking experimental task during the fMRI session) in preterm infants | during NICU stay (from birth to NICU discharge) and when the infants is 2 months-old (Corrected Age for preterm infants) | |
Secondary | Caregiver touch (duration) and insular cortex/somatosensory cortex activation in preterm and full term infants | Correlation between duration of caregiver touch measured by the Baby Care Questionnaire and mean BOLD signal magnitude in the insular cortex and in somatosensory cortex (in the slow skin stroking experimental task during the fMRI session) both in preterm and full-term infants | for preterm infants: from NICU discharge to 2 months (Corrected Age); for full-term infants: from birth to 2 months | |
Secondary | Caregiver touch (quality) and insular cortex/somatosensory cortex activation in preterm and full term infants | Correlation between quality of caregiver touch measured by the Caregiver-Infant Touch Scale and mean BOLD signal magnitude in the insular cortex and in somatosensory cortex (in the slow skin stroking experimental task during the fMRI session) both in preterm and full-term infants | for preterm infants: from NICU discharge to 2 months (Corrected Age); for full-term infants: from birth to 2 months | |
Secondary | Sensitive caregiving behaviors and insular cortex/somatosensory cortex activation in preterm and full term infants | Correlation between sensitive caregiving behaviors measured by the Global Rating Scale and mean BOLD signal magnitude in the insular cortex and in somatosensory cortex (in the slow skin stroking experimental task during the fMRI session) both in preterm and full-term infants | for preterm infants: from NICU discharge to 2 months (Corrected Age); for full-term infants: from birth to 2 months |
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