医学
室周白质软化
警觉
儿科
方差分析
麻醉
胎龄
内科学
怀孕
精神科
遗传学
生物
作者
Rosemary White‐Traut,Michael N. Nelson,Jean M. Silvestri,Minu Patel,Ushanalini Vasan,Bokyung Kim Han,Nancy Cunningham,Kristen Burns,Karen Kopischke,Laura Bradford
标识
DOI:10.1002/(sici)1098-240x(199904)22:2<131::aid-nur5>3.0.co;2-e
摘要
Preterm infants with periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) were evaluated to determine whether multi-sensory stimulation is safe and to assess whether it improved neurobehavior and neurodevelopment. Thirty preterm infants with documented PVL were randomly assigned to control (n = 15) or experimental (Group E) (n = 15) groups at 33 weeks post-conceptional age. Group E infants received 15 minutes of auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular (ATVV) intervention twice a day, five days a week, for four weeks during hospitalization. Repeated measures ANOVA demonstrated that Group E infants experienced significant increases in heart and respiratory rate and a 0.72% drop in hemoglobin saturation, coinciding with a significant behavioral state shift from sleep to alertness during intervention. No differences were identified in neurobehavioral function and neurodevelopment, indicating that Group E suffered no injury. Group E had an average hospital stay nine days shorter than that of controls, with the associated cost savings of $213,840. The earlier hospital discharge indicates that ATVV intervention promotes alertness without compromising physiologic status in vulnerable infants. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Res Nurs Health 22:131–143, 1999
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