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Abstract

Grant Number: 5R01AT000370-05
Project Title: Massaging Preterm Infants Enhances Growth
PI Information:NameEmailTitle
HERNANDEZ-REIF, MARIA mhernandez-reif@ches.ua.edu PROFESSOR

Abstract: DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): A number of studies have documented an average of 47 percent greater weight gain in preterm neonates following massage therapy. Our currently funded study suggests that massage therapy increases vagal activity, oxytocin, and IGF-1. In the proposed continuation of this study preemies would be provided daily massages three times a day for 10 days, as in our previously successful protocol. To determine potential mechanisms that may underlie the massage therapy/weight gain relationship we will continue to assess vagal activity and assay insulin, oxytocin, IGF-1 and cortisol as well as gastric motility. We have added an alternative potential pathway for the massage therapy/weight gain relationship. In this expanded model, activity level and the related measures of heart rate, oxygen consumption (based on a formula calculated from heart rate) and temperature mediate the effects of massage therapy on weight gain. A larger sample will be recruited so that we can have the power needed to test our model of the potential mechanisms underlying the weight gain from preterm infant massage. For the current application, 120 preterm infants with common medical complications of prematurity, who are medically stable and residing in the intermediate care ("grower") nursery, will be assigned to groups based on a random stratification on the following variables: gender, gestational age, birthweight, days in the NICU, and study entry weight. One hundred twenty infants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1) ten days of massage therapy (n=60), or 2) standard treatment (n=60). Within-subjects and between-groups analyses will focus on physiological (heart rate, vagal tone, gastric motility, and temperature), biochemical (insulin, oxytocin, IGF-1 and cortisol) and behavioral variables (activity level). The specific aims are: 1) to replicate the data that following ten days of massage therapy, preterm infants show greater daily weight gain and are discharged from the hospital earlier than the controls, thus demonstrating the cost-effectiveness of the intervention; 2) to test a model on two potential underlying mechanisms for weight gain including a) enhanced vagal activity leading to greater gastric motility, higher levels of insulin, IGF-1, and oxytocin and lower cortisol levels in the massage versus the control infants at the end of the study; and/or b) increased physical activity and its associated increase in heart rate oxygen consumption and temperature leading to greater weight gain. These pathways (vagal activity and physical activity) will be tested by path analyses. Determining underlying mechanisms for the massage therapy/weight gain relationship is a critical process required by the neonatology community for massage therapy to be adopted as a standard neonatal intensive care unit procedure.

Public Health Relevance:
This Public Health Relevance is not available.

Thesaurus Terms:
child physical development, growth /development, human therapy evaluation, low birth weight infant human, massage therapy, newborn human (0-6 weeks), premature infant human, weight gain
alternative medicine, body physical activity, body temperature, cortisol, gastrointestinal motility /pressure, heart rate, insulin, insulinlike growth factor, outcomes research, oxygen consumption, oxytocin, vagus nerve
blood chemistry, cephalometry, clinical research, human subject, statistics /biometry

Institution: UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
1507 Levante Avenue
CORAL GABLES, FL 33124
Fiscal Year: 2005
Department: PEDIATRICS
Project Start: 15-APR-2000
Project End: 31-MAR-2007
ICD: NATIONAL CENTER FOR COMPLEMENTARY & ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
IRG: ZRG1


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