학술논문

The effect of enteral bolus feeding on regional intestinal oxygen saturation in preterm infants is age-dependent: a longitudinal observational study
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
BMC Pediatrics. 19(1)
Subject
Cerebral oxygen saturation
Enteral feeding
Feeding volumes
Fractional tissue oxygen extraction
Intestinal oxygen saturation
Postnatal age
Postmenstrual age
Language
English
ISSN
1471-2431
Abstract
Background: The factors that determine the effect of enteral feeding on intestinal perfusion after preterm birth remain largely unknown. We aimed to determine the effect of enteral feeding on intestinal oxygen saturation (rintSO2) in preterm infants and evaluated whether this effect depended on postnatal age (PNA), postmenstrual age (PMA), and/or feeding volumes. We also evaluated whether changes in postprandial rintSO2 affected cerebral oxygen saturation (rcSO2).Methods: In a longitudinal observational pilot study using near-infrared spectroscopy we measured rintSO2 and rcSO2 continuously for two hours on postnatal Days 2 to 5, 8, 15, 22, 29, and 36. We compared preprandial with postprandial values over time using multi-level analyses. To assess the effect of PNA, PMA, and feeding volumes, we performed Wilcoxon signed-rank tests or logistic regression analyses. To evaluate the effect on rcSO2, we also used logistic regression analyses.Results: We included 29 infants: median (range) gestational age 28.1 weeks (25.1–30.7) and birth weight 1025 g (580–1495). On Day 5, rintSO2 values decreased postprandially: mean (SE) 44% (10) versus 35% (7), P = .01. On Day 29, rintSO2 values increased: 44% (11) versus 54% (7), P = .01. Infants with a PMA ≥ 32 weeks showed a rintSO2 increase after feeding (37% versus 51%, P = .04) whereas infants with a PMA < 32 weeks did not. Feeding volumes were associated with an increased postprandial rintSO2 (per 10 mL/kg: OR 1.63, 95% CI, 1.02–2.59). We did not find an effect on rcSO2 when rintSO2 increased postprandially.Conclusions: Our study suggests that postprandial rintSO2 increases in preterm infants only from the fifth week after birth, particularly at PMA ≥ 32 weeks when greater volumes of enteral feeding are tolerated. We speculate that at young gestational and postmenstrual ages preterm infants are still unable to increase intestinal oxygen saturation after feeding, which might be essential to meet metabolic demands.Trial registration: For this prospective longitudinal pilot study we derived patients from a larger observational cohort study: CALIFORNIA-Trial, Dutch Trial Registry NTR4153.