4.5 Article

Assessment of a hearing protection device on infant sleep in the neonatal intensive care unit

Journal

JOURNAL OF SLEEP RESEARCH
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jsr.13610

Keywords

NICU; noise reduction; polysomnography; premature infant; sleep-wake

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Premature infants often face disruptions in sleep due to adverse noise in the neonatal intensive care unit. This study found that a hearing protection device called DREAMIES may help improve sleep in premature infants by reducing noise levels.
Premature infants often require prolonged hospitalisation in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) where they are exposed to adverse noise that may disrupt sleep and further compromise recovery and developmental outcomes. This single-session trial assessed the effects of a novel circumaural hearing protection device (DREAMIES (R); NEATCAP Medical LLC) on sleep in 10 premature infants (mean 34.1 weeks GA) in a Level III NICU. Using polysomnography (PSG), the infant's sleep was compared between three interfeed periods throughout which DREAMIES (R) was ON or OFF. Each infant received the same condition order, OFF1-ON-OFF2. The PSG 30 s epochs were scored by a rater masked to the condition as Quiet Sleep, Active Sleep, Indeterminate Sleep, and Wake. There was a 14.1% increase in sleep from OFF1 to ON (p = 0.05) and an 18.4% decrease in sleep from ON to OFF2 (p = 0.02); an analogous inverse effect was observed for wake (chi(2) = 5.03, p = 0.08). There was a main effect of DREAMIES on active sleep (chi(2) = 7.4, p = 0.025) due to more active sleep for ON1 (46%) compared with OFF2 (32%; p = 0.074). No significant effect was observed for quiet sleep or indeterminate sleep. On average, the sound level was 51 dBA (range 36-113 dBA) and did not differ significantly among the three periods. The strongest relationship between the minute-by-minute maximum sound level and movement actigraphy was observed for the OFF1 condition (rho 0.301, p < 0.001). These findings suggest that DREAMIES (R) may augment sleep in premature infants by reducing acute episodes of adverse noise in the NICU.

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