| Literature DB >> 26997574 |
Giesse Albeche Duarte1, Ramon Bossardi Ramos2, Maria Cristina de Almeida Freitas Cardoso3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Feeding difficulties in children with cleft lip and palate (CLP) are frequent and appear at birth due to impairment of sucking and swallowing functions. The use of appropriate feeding methods for the different types of cleft and the period of the child's life is of utmost importance for their full development.Entities:
Keywords: Aleitamento materno; Breastfeeding; Cleft lip; Cleft palate; Feeding methods; Fenda labial; Fissura palatina; Métodos de alimentação; Swallowing disorders; Transtornos de deglutição
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26997574 PMCID: PMC9444722 DOI: 10.1016/j.bjorl.2015.10.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 1808-8686
Levels of scientific evidence according to the criteria proposed by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.
| Level of evidence | Type of scientific study |
|---|---|
| 1a | Systematic review or meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials |
| 1b | High-quality randomized controlled trials |
| 2a | Systematic review or meta-analysis of non-randomized controlled trials |
| 2b | High-quality non-randomized controlled trials |
| 3a | Systematic review of cohort studies |
| 3b | Cohort studies or low quality randomized controlled trials |
| 4 | Studies from clinical outcomes |
| 5a | Systematic review of a case-control study |
| 5b | Case-control studies |
| 6 | Series of cases |
| 7 | Specialists’ opinion without overt critical assessment |
Figure 1Search strategy.
Characterization of studies comparing feeding methods in the preoperative period of surgical repair.
| Year | LE | Age range | Cleft type | Methods | Assessed parameters | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | 1b | 52/49 | NB | Lip and/or palate | Rigid bottle | Weight; length; head circumference. | Squeezable bottle: beneficial effect on weight gain and head circumference. |
| 2011 | 1b | 38/19 | 0–14 w | Involving the palate | Syringe | Time of feeding; efficiency (presence of food escape and/or regurgitation); weight gain. | Syringe: higher volume of food and shorter feeding time, less escape and regurgitation and increase in weight gain. |
| 2015 | 3b | 50/50/50 | 2–12 m | Lip and palate | Paladai | Anthropometrics; weight gain pattern. | Mean weight and mean weight gain velocity: paladai > bottle > spoon; paladai: higher number of well-nourished children until the palate repair surgery; however, after surgery and the start of complementary feeding, the nutritional status of the three groups improved. |
n, number of subjects or observations; m, months; w, weeks; NB, newborn; LE, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association level of evidence.
Characterization of studies comparing methods of feeding in the postoperative period of surgical repair of cleft lip and/or palate, isolated lip repair, or lip associated or not associated with palate.
| Year | LE | Age range | Cleft | Methods | Assessed parameters | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | 3b | 40/40 | 4 d to 12 m | Lip and/or palate | Tube and syringe | Surgical wound dehiscence and fistula; weight gain; nutritional status. | Wound dehiscence and presence of fistula was similar in both groups; better weight gain and nutritional status in the bottle/BF group. |
| 1996 | 1b | 20/20 | 3–6 m | Lip | BF | Weight; wound dehiscence and appearance; analgesia and intravenous fluids; hospital costs. | BF: greater weight gain. Spoon: greater need for analgesia/sedation and intravenous fluids for a longer period of time and higher hospital costs. |
| 2005 | 1b | 23/22 | 3–13 m | Involving lip | Bottle and spoon | Anthropometrics; caloric intake; clinical analysis tests; wound complications. | Similar results with both methods, but with better acceptance of food with bottle and spoon. |
| 2013 | 1b | 96/96 | 3–6 m | Involving lip | BF/bottle | Wound complications; parental satisfaction. | Similar results regarding wound dehiscence; parents more satisfied with BF/bottle. |
n, number of subjects or observations; d, days; m, months; BF, breastfeeding; tube, feeding tube; LE, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association level of evidence.
Characterization of studies comparing feeding methods in the postoperative period of surgical repair of cleft palate associated or not associated with lip repair.
| Year | LE | Age range | Cleft palate and/or lip | Methods | Assessed parameters | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 3b | 34/34 | 6–12 m | Involving the palate | Feeding tube | Feeding; analgesia/pain; hospital length of stay. | Tube: less need for analgesia and length of hospital stay. Bottle: more food rejection, pain, team concerns, difficulty in offering medication and more frequent and prolonged feeding. |
| 2009 | 1b | 42/40 | 4–25 m | Involving the palate | Bottle | Complications; use of sedation; oral ingestion; weight gain. | Complications: use of sedation and weight gain similar in both groups. Greater oral intake in the bottle group on the 6th day PO. |
| 2013 | 1b | 18/23 | 5–10 m | Involving the palate | Tube | Analgesia/pain; intravenous fluids and enteral feeding were administered. | Number of painful episodes and need for morphine administration similar in both groups. Feeding volume was higher in tube group and greater need for intravenous fluid in the OF group. |
| 2013 | 4 | 88/88 | 11–18 m | Involving the palate | Cup | Positioning, coughing, choking, escape, feeding time and accepted volume; caregiver safety. | Spoon: less food escape through the lip cleft and greater volume of food received. |
n, number of subjects or observations; m, months; PO, postoperative; tube, feeding tube; OF, oral feeding; LE, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association level of evidence.