BACKGROUND: Guidelines published by the International Liaison Committee for Resuscitation and by the World Health Organization recommend delaying cord clamping at birth as part of routine care for infants. OBJECTIVE: To study the use of milking of the cord 4 times as an alternative to enhance the redistribution of placental blood into the baby. METHODS: This is a prospective cohort study of neurodevelopmental assessment by the Bayley III method of very preterm infants who had participated in a trial of delayed cord clamping versus cord milking at birth that was conducted in a neonatal tertiary care hospital. The primary outcomes were differences in cognitive, motor and language development at 2 and 3.5 years. Two-tailed analyses were performed with the x03C7;2 test, Fisher's exact test, t test, Mann-Whitney U test and ANCOVA. RESULTS: Out of the 58 infants enrolled in the original study, 39 infants (67%) were assessed at 2 years and 29 (50%) at 3.5 years of age. Neurodevelopmental outcomes at 2 and 3.5 years did not significantly differ between the two groups for the three Bayley III composite scores. At 3.5 years there was a trend towards higher scores for girls in the language composite scores (girls: mean = 121.6, SD = 15.22; boys: mean = 101.07, SD = 19.84) and on the motor scale (girls: mean = 124.60, SD = 18.15; boys: mean = 97.86, SD = 17.23). CONCLUSIONS: In this small number of participants followed up at 2 and 3.5 years of age, milking of the cord 4 times did not have any long-term adverse effect on neurodevelopmental outcome, suggesting that cord milking could be used as an alternative to delayed cord clamping.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Guidelines published by the International Liaison Committee for Resuscitation and by the World Health Organization recommend delaying cord clamping at birth as part of routine care for infants. OBJECTIVE: To study the use of milking of the cord 4 times as an alternative to enhance the redistribution of placental blood into the baby. METHODS: This is a prospective cohort study of neurodevelopmental assessment by the Bayley III method of very preterm infants who had participated in a trial of delayed cord clamping versus cord milking at birth that was conducted in a neonatal tertiary care hospital. The primary outcomes were differences in cognitive, motor and language development at 2 and 3.5 years. Two-tailed analyses were performed with the x03C7;2 test, Fisher's exact test, t test, Mann-Whitney U test and ANCOVA. RESULTS: Out of the 58 infants enrolled in the original study, 39 infants (67%) were assessed at 2 years and 29 (50%) at 3.5 years of age. Neurodevelopmental outcomes at 2 and 3.5 years did not significantly differ between the two groups for the three Bayley III composite scores. At 3.5 years there was a trend towards higher scores for girls in the language composite scores (girls: mean = 121.6, SD = 15.22; boys: mean = 101.07, SD = 19.84) and on the motor scale (girls: mean = 124.60, SD = 18.15; boys: mean = 97.86, SD = 17.23). CONCLUSIONS: In this small number of participants followed up at 2 and 3.5 years of age, milking of the cord 4 times did not have any long-term adverse effect on neurodevelopmental outcome, suggesting that cord milking could be used as an alternative to delayed cord clamping.
Authors: Anna Lene Seidler; Gillian M L Gyte; Heike Rabe; José L Díaz-Rossello; Lelia Duley; Khalid Aziz; Daniela Testoni Costa-Nobre; Peter G Davis; Georg M Schmölzer; Colleen Ovelman; Lisa M Askie; Roger Soll Journal: Pediatrics Date: 2021-03 Impact factor: 7.124
Authors: Douglas A Blank; Graeme R Polglase; Martin Kluckow; Andrew William Gill; Kelly J Crossley; Alison Moxham; Karyn Rodgers; Valerie Zahra; Ishmael Inocencio; Fiona Stenning; Domeic A LaRosa; Peter G Davis; Stuart B Hooper Journal: Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed Date: 2017-12-05 Impact factor: 5.747
Authors: Jeff Bolstridge; Tracy Bell; Barbara Dean; Amy Mackley; Gina Moore; Cheryl Swift; Dina Viscount; David A Paul; Stephen A Pearlman Journal: BMC Pediatr Date: 2016-09-13 Impact factor: 2.125
Authors: Neha Kumbhat; Barry Eggleston; Alexis S Davis; Krisa P Van Meurs; Sara Bonamo DeMauro; Elizabeth E Foglia; Satyanarayan Lakshminrusimha; Michele C Walsh; Kristi L Watterberg; Myra H Wyckoff; Abhik Das; Sara C Handley Journal: Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed Date: 2020-07-30 Impact factor: 5.747