Neonatal Feeding and Developmental Issues

Posted On 2024-05-15 15:13:11

This series on “Neonatal Feeding and Developmental Issues” is edited by Dr. Steven M. Barlow, from the University of Nebraska (USA).

Editorial
Neonatal feeding and developmental issues
Steven M. Barlow

Original article
Preterm infants born prior to 32 weeks gestation experience more symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux in the first 6 months of life than infants born at later gestational ages
Britt F. Pados, Grace Briceno, Victoria Feaster, Katherine Gregory

Mediational models of maternal stress in neonatal intensive care units
Chantal Lau, Marie R. Turcich, J. Kennard Fraley

Validity of anti-reflux formulas as a slightly thick liquid: effect of time, caloric density, and refrigerated storage on formula thickness
Katlyn Elizabeth McGrattan, Abigail Spoden, Abbey Sterkowitz, Memorie M. Gosa, Michael Beckstrand4, Kayla Hernandez

Salivary RNA sequencing highlights a sex-specific developmental time course towards oral feeding maturation in the newborn
Prarthana Khanna, Kaley Jenney, Albert K. Tai, Jill L. Maron

The home environment and its relation to vocalizations in the first year of life
Morgan Hines, Thomas Carpenito, Alaina Martens, Alicia Iizuka, Billi Aspinwall, Emily Zimmerman

Spectral features of non-nutritive suck dynamics in extremely preterm infants
Steven M. Barlow, Chunxiao Liao, Jaehoon Lee, Seungman Kim, Jill L. Maron, Dongli Song, Priya Jegatheesan, Balaji Govindaswami, Bernard J. Wilson, Kushal Bhakta John P. Cleary

Review article
An attempt at building a database of children using donor human milk in Japan
Motoichiro Sakurai, Yuko Sakurai, Yuka Sano Wada, Yuuki Tani, Katsumi Mizuno

Narrative review of perinatal management of extremely preterm infants: what’s the evidence?
Wan Tang, Ting Gao, Yun Cao, Wenhao Zhou, Dongli Song, Laishuan Wang

Disclosure:
The series “Neonatal Feeding and Developmental Issues” was commissioned by the editorial office, Pediatric Medicine without any sponsorship or funding. Dr. Steven M. Barlow served as the unpaid Guest Editor for the series.