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Effect of Milk Warming on the Very Low Birth Weight Infant

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Feeding Disorder Neonatal
Very Low Birth Weight Infant
Weight Gain
Interventions
Other: Treatment Guardian Milk Warmer (Medela TM)
Other: Control
Registration Number
NCT04282655
Lead Sponsor
University of Oklahoma
Brief Summary

This study will compare if using a continuous milk warmer to warm breast milk compared to the standard method of warming breast milk in a hot water bath improves weight gain and feeding tolerance in infants born at 32 weeks gestation or less over a ten-day period. The standard method does not keep the breast milk at a consistent temperature during the feeding. A continuous milk warmer maintains the breast milk at body temperature throughout the feeding. It is unknown which method improves weight gain and feeding tolerance in very low birth weight infants.

Detailed Description

The aim of this randomized prospective quasi-experimental study is to determine if providing body temperature breast milk feedings to very low birth weight infants through use of continuous milk warmer improves feeding tolerance and weight gain compared to a standard milk warming technique.

Warming breast milk in a hot water bath just prior to feeding prior to feeding in the neonatal intensive care unit is a common practice. However, little evidence is available to support a standard warming method. This method allows inconsistent temperatures at time of feeding and progressive cooling of the milk during the feeding. No published study used a continuous warming device that delivered milk at a consistent physiological temperature throughout the feeding. The continuous warmer externally heats milk in the tubing just posterior to the feeding tube to provide body temperature milk to the infant.

A convenience sample from the Children's Hospital at OU Medical Center of 50 very low birth weight infants will be randomly assigned to either the experimental or control group for ten days. The experimental group will receive warmed feedings through the duration of the feeding through the use of the Guardian Warmer™, a continuous milk warming device. A control group will receive breast milk feedings warmed using the standard milk warming methods. Feeding tolerance and weight gain over the ten-day period will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of continuous milk warming.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
44
Inclusion Criteria

• Gestational age 28-32 weeks on full enteral feeding of breast milk

Exclusion Criteria
  • Mechanical ventilation
  • Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP)
  • Total parenteral nutrition, or any congenital anomalies
  • Severe to moderate respiratory disease
  • Previous medical or surgical necrotizing enterocolitis.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Treatment Guardian Milk Warmer (Medela TM)Treatment Guardian Milk Warmer (Medela TM)External continuous milk warmer that heats milk within the tubing just posterior to the feeding tube to provide milk at body temperature for feeding infusion.
ControlControlStandard method of warming breast milk in a hot water bath prior to feeding.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Weight GainAt study completion, 10 days.

Comparison of two groups for weight gain over time in grams

Feeding IntoleranceAt study completion, 10 days

Comparison of feeding tolerance between groups using a residual algorithm

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Head CircumferenceAt study completion, 10 days

frontal-occipital circumference in centimeters

Body LengthAt Study completion, 10 days

Length as measured in centimeters

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Oklahoma, The Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States

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