Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study
Abstract Introduction Multiple studies have shown the effects of prone (PP), supine (SP) and kangaroo (KP) positions on clinical and physiological outcomes in preterm newborns, but none compared these three types of positioning between them. Objective To investigate the influence of these positionings on heart rate, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and alertness status in clinically stable preterm newborns (NBs) admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit. Methods In a randomized clinical trial, clinically stable NBs with gestational ages from 30 to 37 weeks who were breathing spontaneously were allocated in three positioning groups: PP, SP and KP. Heart rate, breathing frequency, SpO2 and alertness status were evaluated immediately before and after 30 minutes of positioning. Results In all, 66 NBs were assessed (corrected age: 35.48 ± 1.94 weeks; weight: 1840.14 ± 361.09 g), (PP: n = 22; SP: n = 23; KP: n = 21). NBs in the PP group showed a significant improvement in peripheral SpO2 (97.18 ± 2.16 vs 95.47 ± 2.93 vs 95.57 ± 2.95, p = 0.03) compared with the SP and KP groups. Conclusion In clinically stable preterm NBs, the PP was associated with better peripheral oxygen saturation than the SP or KP. In addition, there was a reduction in heart rate within prone position group and in the KP group there was an increase in the number of NBs in the deep sleep classification.
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Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná
2023
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oai:scielo:S0103-515020230001002012023-01-05Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical studyCastro,Estefani SantosBacil,Leticia FurmanAlmeida,Franciny de Lima deAndreazza,Marimar GorettiAlves,Rodolfo AugustoValderramas,Silvia Regina Patient positioning Physical therapy Preterm infant Respiratory care units Respiratory therapy Abstract Introduction Multiple studies have shown the effects of prone (PP), supine (SP) and kangaroo (KP) positions on clinical and physiological outcomes in preterm newborns, but none compared these three types of positioning between them. Objective To investigate the influence of these positionings on heart rate, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and alertness status in clinically stable preterm newborns (NBs) admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit. Methods In a randomized clinical trial, clinically stable NBs with gestational ages from 30 to 37 weeks who were breathing spontaneously were allocated in three positioning groups: PP, SP and KP. Heart rate, breathing frequency, SpO2 and alertness status were evaluated immediately before and after 30 minutes of positioning. Results In all, 66 NBs were assessed (corrected age: 35.48 ± 1.94 weeks; weight: 1840.14 ± 361.09 g), (PP: n = 22; SP: n = 23; KP: n = 21). NBs in the PP group showed a significant improvement in peripheral SpO2 (97.18 ± 2.16 vs 95.47 ± 2.93 vs 95.57 ± 2.95, p = 0.03) compared with the SP and KP groups. Conclusion In clinically stable preterm NBs, the PP was associated with better peripheral oxygen saturation than the SP or KP. In addition, there was a reduction in heart rate within prone position group and in the KP group there was an increase in the number of NBs in the deep sleep classification.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessPontifícia Universidade Católica do ParanáFisioterapia em Movimento v.36 20232023-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-51502023000100201en10.1590/fm.2023.36102 |
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Castro,Estefani Santos Bacil,Leticia Furman Almeida,Franciny de Lima de Andreazza,Marimar Goretti Alves,Rodolfo Augusto Valderramas,Silvia Regina |
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Castro,Estefani Santos Bacil,Leticia Furman Almeida,Franciny de Lima de Andreazza,Marimar Goretti Alves,Rodolfo Augusto Valderramas,Silvia Regina Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
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Castro,Estefani Santos Bacil,Leticia Furman Almeida,Franciny de Lima de Andreazza,Marimar Goretti Alves,Rodolfo Augusto Valderramas,Silvia Regina |
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Castro,Estefani Santos |
title |
Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
title_short |
Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
title_full |
Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
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Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
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Premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
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premature newborn positionings and physiologic parameters – a randomized clinical study |
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Abstract Introduction Multiple studies have shown the effects of prone (PP), supine (SP) and kangaroo (KP) positions on clinical and physiological outcomes in preterm newborns, but none compared these three types of positioning between them. Objective To investigate the influence of these positionings on heart rate, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and alertness status in clinically stable preterm newborns (NBs) admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit. Methods In a randomized clinical trial, clinically stable NBs with gestational ages from 30 to 37 weeks who were breathing spontaneously were allocated in three positioning groups: PP, SP and KP. Heart rate, breathing frequency, SpO2 and alertness status were evaluated immediately before and after 30 minutes of positioning. Results In all, 66 NBs were assessed (corrected age: 35.48 ± 1.94 weeks; weight: 1840.14 ± 361.09 g), (PP: n = 22; SP: n = 23; KP: n = 21). NBs in the PP group showed a significant improvement in peripheral SpO2 (97.18 ± 2.16 vs 95.47 ± 2.93 vs 95.57 ± 2.95, p = 0.03) compared with the SP and KP groups. Conclusion In clinically stable preterm NBs, the PP was associated with better peripheral oxygen saturation than the SP or KP. In addition, there was a reduction in heart rate within prone position group and in the KP group there was an increase in the number of NBs in the deep sleep classification. |
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Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná |
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2023 |
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http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-51502023000100201 |
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