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Swallowing and Feeding of Young Children on High-flow Oxygen Therapy

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Date 2024 Apr 4
PMID 38572899
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Abstract

Background:  Oral feeding practices of young patients on high-flow oxygen (HFO2) have been controversial. Limited literature exists on this topic, but new studies suggest introducing oral feeds.

Objective:  This study aims to describe the changes in swallowing and feeding of a group of young children on HFO2.

Method:  Twelve participants (mean age 34.17 months [s.d. = 3.97]) on HFO2 were assessed clinically at the bedside using the Schedule of Oral Motor Assessment. Assessments were conducted twice to determine the change in characteristics: upon approval from the managing doctor when respiratory stability on HFO2 was achieved and for a second time on the last day of receiving HFO2 (mean 2.6 days apart). Patients received standard in-patient care and speech therapy intervention.

Results:  Most participants displayed typical oral motor function at initial and final assessments for liquid, puree and semi-solid consistencies. Purees and soft solid consistencies were introduced to most participants (n = 11, 91.7%). Solids and chewables were challenging for all participants during both assessments. Half of the participants displayed gagging and a wet vocal quality with thin liquids at the initial assessment only.

Conclusion:  This small-scale study found that HFO2 should not preclude oral diets, but in this sample, small amounts of oral feeding could be introduced with caution, in an individualised manner, and with a collaborative multidisciplinary approach. Further research is essential.Contribution: Partial oral feeding of specific consistencies was possible during the assessment of young paediatric in-patients on HFO2. Monitoring of individual patient characteristics and risk factors by a specialist feeding team is essential.

Citing Articles

Speech-language therapists' views of oral feeding of infants on high-flow oxygen.

Dludla A, Forman T, Lloyd M, Moodley S, Pillay S, Kruger E Health SA. 2025; 30:2809.

PMID: 40062352 PMC: 11886569. DOI: 10.4102/hsag.v30i0.2809.

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