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The Effect of Womb Recordings on Maturation of Respiratory Control in Preterm Infants

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Intermittent Hypoxemia
Bradycardia
Apnea of Prematurity
Interventions
Other: Womb sound recordings
Registration Number
NCT05298748
Lead Sponsor
Case Western Reserve University
Brief Summary

The aim of this proposal is to characterize the acute effect of early postnatal sound exposure on neuronal maturation of the respiratory control regions of the brain in preterm infants.

Detailed Description

The aim of this proposal is to characterize the acute effect of early postnatal sound exposure on neuronal maturation of the respiratory control regions of the brain in preterm infants. We hypothesize that exposure to appropriately designed womb-like sounds in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) will induce a more mature and stabilized cardiorespiratory pattern manifesting as a decrease in apnea, bradycardia, intermittent hypoxemia and mean heart rate.

This proposal lays the foundation for further development of actual womb and maternal voice recordings containing components that closely mimic the womb environment during 33-34 weeks of gestation, a proposed therapeutic window of brain development. These sound recordings will provide low risk interventions sorely needed to stabilize respiration, reduce intermittent hypoxemia and induce maturation of neuronal respiratory networks during this critical stage of development.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
34
Inclusion Criteria
  • preterm infants 29-33 weeks gestational age at birth
  • 34 weeks corrected age
  • off respiratory support >1.5 lpm
Exclusion Criteria
  • on respiratory support >1.5 lpm
  • congenital anomalies

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Womb sound recordings followed by ambient noiseWomb sound recordingsAt 34 weeks corrected age, preterm infants (29-33 weeks gestational age at birth), who are off respiratory support \>1.5 lpm, will be exposed to alternating 6-hour periods of a recording of commercially available womb sounds followed by ambient noise over a 24-hour period for a combined total of 12 hours of womb sounds and 12 hours of ambient noise.
Ambient noise followed by Womb soundWomb sound recordingsAt 34 weeks corrected age, preterm infants (29-33 weeks gestational age at birth), who are off respiratory support \>1.5 lpm, will be exposed to alternating 6-hour periods of a recording of ambient noise followed by commercially available womb sounds over a 24-hour period for a combined total of 12 hours of womb sounds and 12 hours of ambient noise.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
mean heart rateDuring the 24 hour period of randomized blocks of womb sound recordings and ambient noise

mean heart rate

respiratory pausesDuring the 24 hour period of randomized blocks of womb sound recordings and ambient noise

Respiratory pauses of \>5sec will be documented to increase the chance of capturing small alterations in respiratory stability.

cardiorespiratory eventsDuring the 24 hour period of randomized blocks of womb sound recordings and ambient noise

Apnea (\>20 seconds or shorter with intermittent hypoxemia \<85% or bradycardia \<80bpm)

intermittent hypoxemiaDuring the 24 hour period of randomized blocks of womb sound recordings and ambient noise

falls in oxygen saturation \<85%

bradycardiaDuring the 24 hour period of randomized blocks of womb sound recordings and ambient noise

heart rate \<80bpm

body motionDuring the 24 hour period of randomized blocks of womb sound recordings and ambient noise

non-cardiac alterations in the oximeter plethysmograph waveform

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

🇺🇸

Cleveland, Ohio, United States

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