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Abstract Details

Quantitative Assessment of Nutritive Sucking as an Early Biomarker of Brain Injury in Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy
Child Neurology and Developmental Neurology
P10 - Poster Session 10 (8:00 AM-9:00 AM)
8-004
To examine the relationship between nutritive sucking and brain abnormalities in infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) to support early neurodevelopmental assessment.

Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) occurs when an infant’s brain is deprived of oxygen and blood flow during or shortly after birth. HIE affects 2–5 per 1,000 live births, and 20–40% of survivors develop lifelong neurodevelopmental impairments. Early identification is critical to initiate timely interventions, yet current diagnostic tools, such as MRI and cranial ultrasound, have practical limitations. This study investigates whether nutritive sucking patterns can serve as early, non-invasive biomarkers of neurological dysfunction in HIE, potentially enabling earlier long-term outcome risk and timing of interventions.

 

In this observational cohort study, a longitudinal analysis was conducted on 49 neurotypical (gestational age: 39.7 ± 1.5 weeks; 22 females) and 10 infants with HIE (gestational age: 39 ± 1.4 weeks; 5 males). Inclusion criteria for the HIE group included term-born infants diagnosed with HIE based on clinical criteria, evidence of encephalopathy, and neuroimaging findings. Nutritive sucking was assessed at 1, 2, 4, and 6 months of age during bottle feeding using an FDA approved feeding system. We estimated quantitative features of nutritive sucking (i.e., amplitude, smoothness, and frequency). We examined whether these features are different between neurotypical and HIE infants across time using a non-parametric mixed ANOVA test.

Compared to neurotypical infants, HIE infants exhibited reduced sucking smoothness at 1 month, reduced sucking amplitude at 2-4 months, and reduced sucking frequency at 6 months. Both groups showed significant developmental progression.

 

Quantitative sucking metrics —particularly smoothness at 1 month— may serve as sensitive early biomarkers for neurological dysfunction in HIE. Implementing evidence-based feeding assessments in neonatal care may enhance early risk stratification during a critical neurodevelopmental window. 
Authors/Disclosures
Mozhde Askari, MD
PRESENTER
Dr. Askari has nothing to disclose.
Amanda Crandall, PhD Dr. Crandall has nothing to disclose.
Julie Lumeng, MD Dr. Lumeng has received publishing royalties from a publication relating to health care. Dr. Lumeng has received publishing royalties from a publication relating to health care.
Sabrina Shandley, PhD Dr. Shandley has nothing to disclose.
David Riley, MD Dr. Riley has nothing to disclose.
Lauren H. Johnson (Siemens Healthineers) Ms. Johnson has nothing to disclose.
Ioannis Ntoumanis, PhD Dr. Ntoumanis has nothing to disclose.
CHRISTOS PAPADELIS, PhD Dr. PAPADELIS has nothing to disclose.