Effects of nonnutritive sucking on state and activity: Term-preterm comparisons |
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Authors: | R. Woodson J. Drinkwin C. Hamilton |
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Affiliation: | University of Texas at Austin USA |
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Abstract: | The effects of ad libitum access to a pacifier on the behavioral state and motor activity of preterm infants have been compared with those observed in full-term neonates. Regardless of maturity, nonnutritive sucking (NNS) decreases the amount of time spent in active states and increases that spent in quiescent states, lengthens the longest state bout, and decreases the frequency of state transitions. NNS also reduces overall motor activity as well as that during Active Sleep. Provided such ad libitum sucking opportunity, preterm infants thus appear to derive no less benefit from NNS than do term neonates. This result contrasts with an earlier finding that preterms are less soothed by NNA than are term infants. |
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Keywords: | sucking state preterm infants full-term neonates |
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