Heart rate variability as a feeding intervention outcome measure in the preterm infant

In this study, we explored the use of heart rate variability (HRV) as a measure of stress in infants during feeding. HRV was compared between usual care feeding and feeding with a gentle, coregulated (CoReg) approach. In the 14 preterm infants in this study, we found that infants fed using the CoReg approach had fewer apneic events and higher RR (they were able to breathe more during feeding). Infants fed using the usual care approach had significantly higher SD12, a measure of HRV indicating randomness in the heart rate, which has been found to be a measure of physiologic stress in other populations. Further research on HRV as an intervention outcome measure is needed. SD12 may be a more sensitive indictor than other physiologic outcomes.

Authors: Britt Pados, Suzanne Thoyre, George Knafl, & Brant Nix

Publication Information: Advances in Neonatal Care. 2017; 17(5): E10-E20. doi: 10.1097/ANC.0000000000000430

This paper is available for free and open access through PubMed Central, click here.

Previous
Previous

Physiology of stress and use of skin-to-skin care as a stress-reducing intervention in the neonatal intensive care unit