Affiliation:
1. Department of Neonatology Meir Medical Center Kfar Saba Israel
2. Faculty of Medicine Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel
3. Department of Nutrition and Dietetics Meir Medical Center Kfar Saba Israel
4. Department of Music Therapy Aalborg University Aalborg Denmark
5. The Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Center University of Bergen Bergen Norway
6. Norwegian Research Centre AS University of Bergen Bergen Norway
Abstract
AbstractObjectivesThis study assessed the association between MT and weight gain among preterm infants hospitalized in Neonatal Intensive Care Units.MethodsData collected during the international, randomized, Longitudinal Study of Music Therapy's Effectiveness for Premature Infants and their Caregivers (LongSTEP) study were compared between the MT group and the standard care (SC) group. Weights were recorded at birth, enrollment, and discharge. Weight percentiles, Z‐scores, weight gain velocity, and extrauterine growth restriction (EUGR) were calculated.ResultsAmong 201 preterm infants included, no significant differences in weight parameters (weight, weight percentiles, weight Z‐scores; all p ≥ 0.23) were found between the MT group (n = 104) and the SC (n = 97) group at birth, enrollment, or discharge. No statistical differences in EUGR represented by change in Z‐scores from birth to discharge were recorded between MT and SC (0.8 vs. 0.7). Among perinatal parameters, younger gestational age (p = 0.005) and male sex (p = 0.012) were associated with increased risk of EUGR at discharge. Antenatal steroid treatment, systemic infection, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, neurological morbidities, retinopathy of prematurity, necrotizing enterocolitis, parental factors (amount of skin‐to‐skin care, bonding, anxiety, and depression questionnaire scores), and type of enteral nutrition did not significantly influence weight gain parameters (all p > 0.05).ConclusionsIn the LongSTEP study, MT for preterm infants and families was not associated with better weight parameters compared to the SC group. The degree of prematurity remains the main risk factor for unfavorable weight parameters.
Subject
Gastroenterology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health