Total Fluid Administration and Weight Loss during the First 2 Weeks in Infants Randomized to Early Enteral Feeding after Extremely Preterm Birth
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Published:2022-11-28
Issue:2
Volume:120
Page:257-262
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ISSN:1661-7800
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Container-title:Neonatology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Neonatology
Author:
Durham LeandraORCID,
Gunawan EmilyORCID,
Nguyen Kelly,
Reeves Audrey,
Shukla Vivek,
Salas Ariel A.ORCID
Abstract
<b><i>Background:</i></b> Randomized trials have not reported the effects of the early progression of feeding volumes on fluid balance and neurodevelopment among infants born extremely preterm (≤28 weeks). <b><i>Method:</i></b> Fluid, electrolyte, and neurodevelopment data of 60 extremely preterm infants randomly assigned to receive either 1 (early feeding group) or 4 days (late feeding group) of trophic feeding volumes at 20–24 mL/kg/day were analyzed. <b><i>Results:</i></b> Infants randomized to the early feeding group received less parenteral fluids, generated lower urine volumes, and had less excessive weight loss during the first 14 days after birth. The 7-point difference in cognitive scores and the 0.5 difference in weight-for-age z-scores favoring the early feeding group did not reach statistical significance. <b><i>Conclusions:</i></b> In extremely preterm infants, early enteral feeding is associated with less total fluid administration and with less excessive weight loss during the first 2 weeks after birth. These short-term effects could have long-lasting benefits.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health