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Osteopathic Manipulation Treatment Improves Cerebro-splanchnic Oximetry in Late Preterm Infants

Journal: Molecules Date: 2019/09, 24(18):. doi: Subito , type of study: clinical trial

Free full text   (https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/24/18/3221)

Keywords:

blood gas analysis [1]
infant [224]
newborn [58]
manipulation, osteopathic [7]
oximetry [2]
splanchnic circulation [1]
brain [76]
late preterm [1]
osteopathic manipulative treatment [2973]
OMT [2951]
splanchnic [1]
clinical trial [612]

Abstract:

Background: To evaluate the effectiveness/side-effects of osteopathic manipulation treatment (OMT) performed on the 7th post-natal day, on cerebro-splanchnic oximetry, tissue activation and hemodynamic redistribution in late preterm (LP) infants by using near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). Methods: Observational pretest-test study consisting in a cohort of 18 LPs who received OMT on the 7th post-natal day. NIRS monitoring was performed at three different time-points: 30 min before (T0), (30 min during (T1) and 30 min after OMT (T2). We evaluated the effects of OMT on the following NIRS parameters: cerebral (c), splanchnic (s) regional oximetry (rSO2), cerebro-splanchnic fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE) and hemodynamic redistribution (CSOR). Results: crSO2 and cFTOE significantly (P < 0.001) improved at T0-T2; srSO2 significantly (P < 0.001) decreased and sFTOE increased at T0-T1. Furthermore, srSO2 and sFTOE significantly improved at T1-T2. Finally, CSOR significantly (P < 0.05) increased at T0-T2. Conclusions: The present data show that OMT enhances cerebro-splanchnic oximetry, tissue activation and hemodynamic redistribution in the absence of any adverse clinical or laboratory pattern. The results indicate the usefulness of further randomized studies in wider populations comparing the effectiveness of OMT with standard rehabilitation programs.


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