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Enteral Nutrition in Term Infants with Congenital Heart Disease: Knowledge Gaps and Future Directions to Improve Clinical Practice

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13030932

Keywords

congenital heart disease; enteral nutrition; term infants; perioperative feeding management; human milk; necrotizing enterocolitis; prostaglandin; patent ductus arteriosus

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The optimization of nutrition is crucial for improving outcomes in newborns with congenital heart disease, but there are various issues and concerns regarding enteral feeding. Different approaches, such as implementing standardized enteral feeding protocols, have shown promise in enhancing the nutritional status and outcomes of infants with CHD.
Optimal nutrition is essential to improve short- and long-term outcomes in newborns with congenital heart disease (CHD). Nevertheless, several issues on nutritional management and concerns about the potential risk of complications related to enteral feeding exist. This narrative review aims to summarize and discuss the available literature on enteral feeding in term infants with CHD. A wide variability in feeding management exists worldwide. Emerging approaches to improve nutritional status and outcomes in infants with CHD include: implementation of a standardized enteral feeding protocol, both preoperative and postoperative, clearly defining time of initiation and advancement of enteral feeds, reasons to withhold, and definitions of feeding intolerance; early minimal enteral feeding; enteral feeding in stable term infants on hemodynamic support; evaluation of enteral feeding in term infants with umbilical arterial catheters and during prostaglandin infusion; assessment and support of oro-motor skills; and promotion and support of breastfeeding and provision of mother's own milk or donor milk when mother's own milk is not available. As evidence from term infants is scarce, available observations and recommendations partially rely on studies in preterm infants. Thus, well-designed studies assessing standardized clinically relevant outcomes are needed to provide robust evidence and shared recommendations and practices.

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