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Sucking Behavior clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05815706 Completed - Breastfeeding Clinical Trials

The Effect of the SNS-Based Feeding on Transition to Exclusive Breastfeeding in Preterm Infants

Start date: November 20, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study investigated the effect of the Supplemental Nursing System (SNS)-based feeding on the time to transition to exclusive breastfeeding, sucking success, and the time to discharge in preterm infants

NCT ID: NCT05769166 Not yet recruiting - Bruxism Clinical Trials

Prevalence Of Deleterious Oral Habits Among a Group of School Children in Cairo, Egypt: Cross-Sectional Study

ACU333
Start date: April 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to detect the prevalence of practicing oral habits among a group of school children in Cairo, Egypt.

NCT ID: NCT05619224 Enrolling by invitation - Premature Birth Clinical Trials

Physiotherapy to Improve Feeding Skills in Preterm Infants

Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

INTRODUCTION: Suction problems are very common in premature children due to a lack of maturation and orofacial control, the manifestation of a low muscle tone and the incoordination during sucking-swallow-breathe. In addition, there are some problems in different systems that get it worse. AIM: compare oral stimulation programme with a neurodevelopmental stimulation intervention programme combined with an oral stimulation programme, evaluating its effectiveness on feeding development, neuromotor development and other aspects of development. METHODOLOGY: we proposed a prospective parallel group clinical trial with two randomized and independent experimental groups. All preterm infants born between 2022-2023 at University Hospital Torrecárdenas, with nasogastric tube and gestational age between 27-32 weeks will be included. EXPECTED BENEFITS: to have better results when the preterm infant is approached globally, also considering the postural situation of the preterm infant. In addition, it is expected that the development of children treated by combining oral stimulation with neurodevelopmental stimulation will be equated or close to healthy and born-to-term child. RESULTS APPLICABILITY: Improved eating performances will reduce length of hospital stay as well as a greater autonomy improving family situation. It will also allow the reduction of hospital costs and the creation of a new way to attend this problem in preterm children.

NCT ID: NCT05249179 Not yet recruiting - Nutrition Disorders Clinical Trials

Comparison of the Effects of Oral Stimulation and Non-nutritive Sucking Practices

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study, it was aimed to compare the effects of oral stimulation and non-nutritive sucking practices on the transition to full oral feeding in babies with a gestational age of 26-32 weeks. Non-oral feeding methods are frequently used in babies born prematurely since sucking and sucking-swallowing coordination have not yet developed. While some premature babies gain the sucking and swallowing reflexes faster, some of them cannot develop this reflex for a long time, so the length of hospital stay is prolonged. All infants who can be fed completely enterally (PMA >29 weeks) will be randomized into 4 groups as oral stimulation (group 1), pacifier (group 2), oral stimulation + pacifier (group 3), and control group by using a stratified blocked randomization method with a block size of 4. Stratification on GA (26-27, 28-29, 30-32 weeks GA) was used to ensure that the groups had similar gestational age distribution. The time of the patients to start breastfeeding and the length of hospital stay (days) will be compared.

NCT ID: NCT04835155 Completed - Premature Birth Clinical Trials

The Effect of The Premature Infant Oral Motorınterventıon on Suckıng Capacıty in Preterm Infants

Start date: May 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

ABSTRACT Objective: To test the effect of the Premature Infant Oral Motor Intervention (PIOMI) at 29-30 weeks post-menstrual age on the development of oral-motor function and sucking capacity. Study Design: This study was a single-blind randomized controlled experimental design. The sample consisted of 60 preterm babies from two Neonatal Intensive Care Units in Gaziantep, Turkey between May 2019 and March 2020, with 30 each in the control and experimental groups. The PIOMI was applied to the experimental group for five minutes a day for 14 consecutive days. Sucking capacity, growth, feeding outcomes, and length of hospital stay (LOS) were measured. The Yakut Manometer Measuring Suction Power (PCT/TR2019/050678) was developed specifically for this study and tested for the first time.

NCT ID: NCT04807647 Enrolling by invitation - Sucking Behavior Clinical Trials

the Effect of White Noise on Sucking and Baby Comfort

Start date: December 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study is a randomized controlled study to determine the effect of white noise on sucking success and infant comfort in newborns in babies aged 34-37 weeks who were fed orally by a full enteral mother in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.