Litcius/Paper detail

Immediate skin‐to‐skin contact after birth ensures stable thermoregulation in very preterm infants in high‐resource settings

Karoline Lode‐Kolz, Charlotte Hermansson, Agnes Linnér, Stina Klemming, Hanne Brit Hetland, Nils Bergman, Siri Lilliesköld, Hanne Markhus Pike, Björn Westrup, Wibke Jonas, Siren Rettedal

2022Acta Paediatrica54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: To investigate the impact of immediate skin-to-skin contact with a parent after birth on thermal regulation in very preterm infants. METHODS: This clinical trial was conducted in three neonatal intensive care units in Scandinavia from 2018 to 2021. Infants born between 28 + 0 and 32 + 6 weeks and days of gestation were randomised to immediate skin-to-skin contact or conventional care in an incubator during the first 6 postnatal hours. We report on a secondary outcome: serial measurements of axillary temperature. RESULTS: Ninety-one infants were randomised to skin-to-skin contact or conventional care. Mean (range) gestational ages were 31 + 2 (28 + 6, 32 + 5) and 31 + 0 (28 + 4, 32 + 6) weeks and days, mean birth weights were 1572 (702, 2352) and 1495 (555, 2440) grams, respectively. Mean (95%CI, p-value) temperatures were within the normal range in both groups, 0.2°C (-0.29, -0.14, p < 0.001) lower in the skin-to-skin contact group. The skin-to-skin contact group had a lower relative risk (95%CI, p-value) of developing events of hyperthermia, RR = 0.70 (0.50, 0.99, p = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Very preterm infants, irrespective of clinical stability, do not develop hypothermia during immediate skin-to-skin contact after birth. Immediate skin-to-skin contact did protect against events of hyperthermia. Concerns about thermal regulation should not limit implementation of immediate skin-to-skin contact in high-resource settings.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSkin to skinThermoregulationSkin temperatureBody contactPediatricsDermatologyBreastfeedingInternal medicineOptoelectronicsPhysicsNeonatal Respiratory Health ResearchInfant Development and Preterm CareNeonatal and fetal brain pathology