Children (Feb 2022)

Early Skin-to-Skin Contact Does Not Affect Cerebral Tissue Oxygenation in Preterm Infants <32 Weeks of Gestation

  • Kathrin Hanke,
  • Tanja K. Rausch,
  • Runa Sosnowski,
  • Pia Paul,
  • Juliane Spiegler,
  • Mirja Müller,
  • Inke R. König,
  • Wolfgang Göpel,
  • Egbert Herting,
  • Christoph Härtel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/children9020211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. 211

Abstract

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Aim: It was the aim of our study to determine the regional cerebral tissue oxygenation saturation (rcSO2) as an additional monitoring parameter during early skin-to-skin contact (SSC) in preterm infants with a gestational age of 2 values were compared between resting time in the incubator (period I), SSC (period II) and handling nursing care (period III). For the comparison, we separated the sequential effects by including a “wash-out phase” of 1 h between each period. Results: During the first 120 h of life 38/53 infants in NIRS 1 and 15/23 infants in NIRS 2 received SSC, respectively. We found no remarkable differences for rcSO2 values of NIRS 1 patients between SSC time and period I (95% confidence interval (CI) for the difference in %: SSC vs. period I [1; 3]). In NIRS 2, rcSO2 values during SSC were only 2% lower compared with period I [median [1. quartile; 3. quartile] in %; 78 [73; 82] vs. 80 [74; 85]] but were similar to period III [78 [72; 83]]. In a combined analysis, a small difference in rcSO2 values between SSC and resting times was found using a generalized linear mixed model that included gender and gestational age (OR 95% CI; 1.178 [1.103; 1.253], p 2 adjustment was required in the vast majority of SSC episodes. Conclusions: Our observational data indicate that rcSO2 values of infants during SSC were comparable to rcSO2 values during incubator care and resting time. This additional monitoring supports a safe implementation of early SSC in extremely preterm infants in NICUs.

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