The Experience of Being Born: A Natural Context for Learning to Suckle

Author:

Alberts Jeffrey R.1,Ronca April E.234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA

2. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston Salem, NC 27157, USA

3. Department of Neurobiology & Anatomy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston Salem, NC 27157, USA

4. Molecular Medicine and Translational Science, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston Salem, NC 27157, USA

Abstract

Understanding the developmental origins of congenital capabilities such as sucking is fundamental knowledge that can contribute to improving the clinical management of early feeding and facilitate the onset of oral ingestion. We describe analyses in rats showing that sensory stimulationin uteroand during birth establishes the newborn’s sucking responses to maternal cues. We mimicked elements of labor and delivery (viz., compressions simulating labor contractions, stroking simulating postnatal maternal licking of the newborn, and postnatal thermal flux), and used them to induce postnatal respiration and nipple attachment in caesarian-delivered pups. We report herein new data showing that, by simulating a fetal rat’s experience of being born, specific components of vaginal birth provide sufficient conditions for the odor learning that guides newborn’s sucking responses. In contrast, the absence ofin uterocompressions was associated with poor sucking onset. Knowing how birth stimuli contribute to the first nipple attachment and constitute a context for learning to suckle is an important step toward better management of some early feeding problems. It can serve also as a foundation for understanding the challenges of facilitating sucking by babies born prematurely so that they do not experience the typical contingencies mediating onset of oral ingestion.

Funder

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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