1 / 85

Sphsc 543 February 12-19, 2010

Sphsc 543 February 12-19, 2010. Questions?. Transitional feeding. Begins at 4-6 months in normal infants Primarily related to CNS and anatomic changes Allows new patterns of food manipulation Eruption of teeth is the most notable change Mandibular before maxillary Girls before boys

kovit
Download Presentation

Sphsc 543 February 12-19, 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sphsc 543February 12-19, 2010 • Questions?

  2. Transitional feeding • Begins at 4-6 months in normal infants • Primarily related to CNS and anatomic changes • Allows new patterns of food manipulation • Eruption of teeth is the most notable change • Mandibular before maxillary • Girls before boys • 20 teeth by second year, 32 by adult

  3. transitional • Teeth as sensory receptors versus motor purposes • Molars important for crushing and grinding food • Tongue movements are basic to food manipulation • Anterior-posterior (AP) movement • Lateral movement

  4. Transition from Liquids • Smooth solids – homogeneous or with fine granular bits • Mashed by tongue gestures at midline • Semifirm solids – soft but holds together • Tongue moves laterally and tongue/jaw make vertical motions • A prelude to molar chewing • Solids – require more mature mastication • Vertical movements become associated with alternating lateral motions • Fully matures between 3-6 years

  5. transitions • Solid foods characterized by: • Handles lumps and textures with ground or mashed foods • Coarsely chopped foods cooked ground meats, lunch meats, soft cooked chicken/fish • Coarsely chopped table foods, most meats, many raw vegetables/fruits. • Brain development from sensory input related to feeding extending to midbrain, cerebellum, thalamus and cerebral cortex • With maturity, children begin to evaluate their food and you start to see food preferences.

  6. Taste and Smell • Important roles in feeding • Experience • Preference • “Supertasters”

  7. Cessation of nipple-feeding • Multi-factorial • Age, culture, maternal desire, lifestyle • Need appropriate CNS development and coordination to manage cup drinking • Open cup • Sippy cup • Prolonged nipple-feeding and dental caries

  8. Overall development • Take away information: • Changing feeding experiences are just a portion of a more general evolution of the developing child • Sensory and motor skills improve and the child acquires food preferences.

  9. Methods of feeding delivery • Oral includes bottle, breast, cup, straw, fingers, utensil • Orogastric • Nasogastric • Short term usage • Gastrostomy • Longer term • Continuous or bolus • But wait….new information is afoot. • Duodenum or jejunum

  10. Feeding Delivery methods • Parenteral • For severe GI disorders that prevent use of the GI tract • Peripheral vein access • Central venous catheter

  11. Clinical Feeding Evaluation • Observation is the key component of the clinical feeding evaluation • Eyes • Ears • Hands • Need to understand the normal functions and how they interact • Interaction of reflexes • Developmental changes • Respiration • Gastrointestinal • Etc.

  12. Clinical feeding evaluation • Consider the ‘whole’ infant • Gather information from all sources • Plan the feeding observation • Equipment • Food textures • Physiologic monitors • Naturalistic and/or elicited

  13. Clinical feeding evaluation • Structured feeding history • Parent description of the problem – allows them to be in control for the first part of the interview • State/behavior – of infant • Schedule – basic nutritional intake and amount of time spent feeding each day • Method of feeding – helps determine a ‘typical’ feeding • Feeding problems observed by parent – alerts the clinician for what to look for

  14. Treatment exploration – Hint for final exam • Develop hypotheses • Synthesize information • What is the child’s level of function? • What factors interfere with feeding function? • How well does the child’s feeding performance “match” the caregiver concerns or expectations? • Is additional information necessary? • Are there treatment techniques available that appear to improve oral feeding function?

  15. Key areas • Physiologic control • Motoric control • Behavior and state • Response to tactile input • Oral-motor control • Sucking, swallowing and breathing • General observations

  16. Clinical feeding evaluation • From Wolf & Glass, 1992

  17. From Wolf & Glass, 1992

  18. Clinical feeding evaluation • An infant’s responses to the environment can indicate how stressful the baby finds the environment and how well she is able to adapt • Response to the environment is manifested through behaviors in any of the following systems: • Autonomic or physiologic • Motoric • State • Attention • What is happening during the feeding at the time of the stress cue?

  19. Autonomic/physiologic • Heart rate • Initial and post-feeding • Highest/lowest values • Abrupt changes • Respiratory rate • Pre/post-feeding • Highest, lowest, trends • Returns to baseline

  20. Breathing • Quality of respiration • Parameters: respiratory effort, changes in respiratory pattern, sound of respirations. • Work of breathing • Endurance

  21. Autonomic/physiologic • Oxygen saturations • Amount of o2 in blood and avail for exchange at tissue level • Generally expressed as a percentage of 100 • Color • Face, neck, mouth (circumoral) • Eyes (circumorbital). • Pale • Blue/purple • Red or ruddy

  22. Autonomic stress cues • From Wolf & Glass, 1992

  23. Motoric • Overall neuromotor control • Disorganized • Tone • Muscle tone • At rest • Change with activity • Quality of movement • Tonal variations versus movement disorder

  24. Motoric • Reflexes • Primitive • Integration • extinguish • Posture • Development of antigravity postural control • Feeding position • Motor • Response to environment • Knowledge of feeder

  25. Motoric Stress cues • From Wolf & Glass, 1992

  26. Feeding position • Normally feeding babies – adaptable • Even slight feeding problems might need help for optimal feeding. • Overall body posture reflects slight flexion • Trunk is neutrally aligned and well supported in a semi-reclined position, with orientation of the head and extremities about the midline. • Using proper positioning during feeding not only affects respiratory mechanism, oral-motor control and swallowing control, but it may also assist in the development of early head/neck postural responses.

  27. State • States of alertness • State 1 – deep sleep • State 2 – light sleep • State 3 – drowsy or semi-dozing • State 4 – quiet alert • State 5 – active alert • State 6 – crying

  28. state • Not one optimal state for every baby • FT (full term) – should have clear differentiation between states • Preemies – may seem more disorganized and lack clarity of state • Older babies – spend more time awake/alert and have clearer/more predictable state changes

  29. State-related stress cues • From Wolf & Glass, 1991

  30. state • Is state or state control interfering with feeding? • How does parent respond or support baby? • What is the baby’s state throughout the feeding? • Factors interfering with state control (immaturity or neurological impairment) may require prolonged need for state-related intervention.

  31. Tactile input • Tactually elicited reflexes present at birth allow the infant to seek out and obtain nutrition safely. • Ability to accept touch to the cheeks, lips, gums and tongue is a prerequisite for feedings and the infant’s survival. • Expression of oral reflexes varied depending on a number of factors. • Must adapt to the tactile components of the tools used in feeding

  32. Tactile input • Face • Cheeks to lips to gums to tongue • Head, trunk, extremities • Input –graded • firm and smooth (pressure from fingers or toy) to • soft and smooth (stuffed animal or soft finger touch) to • prickly or unusual (rubber hedgehog toy). • Same with sold foods • move from smooth/pureed to chunky (baby food/cottage cheese) to crunchy (crackers)

  33. Degree/persistence of response • Absent responses • Hyposensitive • Hypersensitive and Aversive • Immaturity • Chronic illness • Experience • Neurologic impairment

More Related