Skip to content

Comparison Three Methods on Endotracheal Aspiration in Preterm Infants

Comparison the Effects of Facilitated Tucking, Swaddling and Prone Position Applied During Endotracheal Aspiration on Pain, Comfort and Physiological Parameters in Preterm Infants

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05434364
Enrollment
100
Registered
2022-06-28
Start date
2024-02-03
Completion date
2024-09-03
Last updated
2024-10-15

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Preterm, Pain, Acute, Physiological Stress, Nursing Care, Comfort

Brief summary

Stress and pain control are vital for newborns, especially preterm babies. While painful procedures cause physiological changes in the short term, they negatively affect brain development in the long term. Non-pharmacological interventions with proven efficacy include: fetal position, sucrose, breastfeeding, breast milk, maternal presence, non-nutritive sucking, swaddling (wrapping) and skin-to-skin contact, as well as developmentally supportive positioning. Evaluating the effectiveness of nursing practices to be performed on babies, scientifically proving the most beneficial application that will both alleviate pain and increase their comfort in painful procedures such as aspiration and being more beneficial to babies are among the most basic benefits. Thanks to these applications, it is predicted that your baby will experience less pain and provide more comfort. Therefore, this study aim to comparison the effects of facilitated tucking, swaddling and prone position applied during endotracheal aspiration on pain, comfort and physiological parameters in preterm infants.

Detailed description

The universe of the research; between July-September 2022, patients who are intubated on a mechanical ventilator at 32-36 weeks of gestation (middle preterm group) in Gaziantep Cengiz Gökçek Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital Neonatal Intensive Care Unit will consist of. In order to determine the sample size of the study, power analysis was performed using the G\*Power (V3.1.9.7) program. According to Cohen's effect size coefficients; Assuming that the effect size (f = 0.4) of the evaluations to be made between four independent groups will be large/large, Taplak and Bayat (2021) found the effect size as 0.932 as a result of the Power analysis based on the PIPP-R results. In this study, it was determined that there should be at least 15 people in all groups (Fetal position, Swaddling, Prone position and control group) according to the new calculation made with 0.932 effect size, 5% alpha (two-sided) and 99% power. Considering that there may be losses during the study, each group will form a sample of 100 infants, 25 infants each. Random assignment of babies to groups will be carried out by the researcher through a computer program (https://www.randomizer.org)/. After determining the groups of premature babies randomly, one group will be given fetal position, one group swaddling position and one group prone position before, during and after endotracheal aspiration. Pain scores (PIPP-R), comfort scores (Comfort Scale) and physiological parameters (Heart peak beat, oxygen saturation value measured by pulse oximetry) 3 minutes before, during and after these nursing practices in the 1st and 3rd minutes after the procedure.

Interventions

giving facilitated tucking before (1st and 3th minutes), during and after (1st and 3th minutes) the procedure

swaddling before (1st and 3th minutes), during and after (1st and 3th minutes) the procedure

OTHERProne Position

giving prone position before (1st and 3th minutes), during and after (1st and 3th minutes) the procedure

Sponsors

Kilis 7 Aralik University
CollaboratorOTHER
Istanbul University - Cerrahpasa
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Caregiver)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
28 Weeks to 35 Weeks
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Having 28-35 weeks of gestation, * Follow-up as intubated in SIMV mode on mechanical ventilator, * Follow-up on a ventilator between 1-10 days, * Having a body weight of ≥1000 g, * Those who have not taken any opioid or sedative medication until 4 hours before the procedure will be included.

Exclusion criteria

* Presence of congenital anomaly, * Chest tube inserted * Intracranial bleeding, * Presence of condition/anomaly that will prevent prone tilting, * Those with a history of epileptic seizures will be excluded.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pain scores6 minutesPremature infant pain profile-revised (PIPP-R) (min=0 max=21, the higher the score, the more severe the pain)
Comfort score6 minutesNewborn Comfort Behavior Scale (min=6 max=30, High scores signify that the infant is not comfortable)
physiological parameter (Heart rate)6 minutes
physiological parameter (oxygen saturation)6 minutes

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026