Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4281801 | The American Journal of Surgery | 2008 | 4 Pages |
BackgroundTo promote the appropriate and early development of the suck and swallow mechanism, we instituted a “sham” feeding protocol in infants undergoing delayed primary repair of an esophageal atresia anomaly.MethodsFour patients who were born with esophageal atresia required delayed repair and were sham fed before surgical correction. Each infant started with a small volume of oral feeds by using a bottle/nipple with a continuous Replogle suction system placed nasally into the esophageal pouch. They were carefully monitored. The volume of feeds was slowly increased as tolerated.ResultsAll infants successfully completed the sham feeding protocol before undergoing delayed primary esophageal repair. After repair, they had a shortened time to full oral feeding.ConclusionOur “sham” feeding protocol is safe and very effective in early development of oral feeding mechanisms and shortens time to complete oral feeding after delayed esophageal repair.