Sound Monitors Protect Premature Babies

NDIANAPOLIS — Warning lights hover over the snoozing patients in Riley Hospital for Children’s neonatal intensive care unit, ready to flash whenever sound levels creep beyond normal conversation. As decibels rise, the colors on the new monitoring system change from green to yellow to red, hushing chatty parents or doctors so the babies get the rest they need to develop.

Noise louder than roughly the level of conversation can cause premature or sick babies’ hearts to beat too fast or too slowly, said Dr. William Engle, a neonatologist at Riley. And interfering with babies’ vital signs or sleep can slow development and healing because their bodies do most of that work while they sleep.

“The function of babies is to grow and develop, and in between they eat,” he said.

Preemies also need quiet so they can learn their mother’s voice and their brains can figure out how to process sound, things that normally happen in the last trimester before birth.

“It’s definitely a great idea,” Dr. Bob White, a neonatologist at South Bend’s Memorial Hospital, said of the monitoring system in Riley’s neonatal intensive care unit, or NICU.

White, who is not involved in creating or distributing the system, helped write national noise standards for NICUs that have been adopted by the American Institute of Architects and are used in most hospital design.

Inventor Chris Smith hopes doctors around the country agree with White. He has sold his Sonicu system to several Indiana hospitals and wants to expand nationally.

Smith, 43, had no training as a sound engineer and no plans to become an entrepreneur when his son Sean was born five weeks premature in 2000. But he noticed Sean flinch in response to bright light in the NICU of St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, and he wound up designing a system to soften the unit’s lighting.

Then the nurses asked him what he could do about sound.

“That’s really when I realized that there was no good way out there to measure sound, other than your standard, hand-held meter,” he said.

Babies born too soon lose the muffling effect of the womb before their ears can filter sound, White said.

“The sounds … come from all different directions and all different sources, and they’re often associated with unpleasant sensations for the baby,” White said.

NICUs are rife with noise pollution created by employees, equipment and excited family members.

“There’s no good way for the nurses or doctors to walk up to a parent, tap them on the shoulder and say, ‘You’re being too loud,’” Smith said. “That’s confrontational.”

The former car mechanic filled hours of spare time in the evenings and on weekends researching sound standards and building a system.

Smith, who tinkered in radio and TV electronics in high school, hired an acoustical engineer to help. They created a ceiling-mounted system of microphones that picked up sound and funneled data back to a large control panel.

“There was a lot of wiring, a lot of labor, a lot of programming,” he said.

St. Vincent paid around $100,000 for the system, which it installed about five years ago. Smith had no interest in shopping his invention to other hospitals because the work took so much time.

Then Riley Hospital, also in Indianapolis, called a few months later.

“They basically said, ‘I want that,’” he said.

The latest version of Sonicu can feed a stream of both sound and light data digitally to a computer. It offers the cone-shaped warning lights and can quickly dim the lighting in a room that gets too noisy. It also can make lighting mimic the sun by brightening toward noon and then fading, which also helps babies sleep well.

White, the neonatologist who helped write the national standards, said he knows of no other NICU monitoring system that sophisticated.

Smith has sold systems to a handful of Indiana hospitals, so far to good reviews. He said the systems can cost anywhere from $40,000 to $400,000, depending on each hospital’s needs.

The monitors have taught hospital staff to limit the number of groups making rounds at the same time because having more than one group in a room raises noise levels dramatically.

Most NICUs are filled with noise that can’t be helped, White said. Fans in the heating and ventilation system have to operate almost constantly, and the monitors need to beep.

The Sonicu system reins in the main noise maker that can be controlled.

“People think, ‘Oh gosh, I didn’t realize, I’ll go over here so I won’t have to talk so loud,’” White said. “It really is something that addresses the human factors that we do have some control over.”

Story from Washington Post

The Murdoch Childrens Research Institute

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The Murdoch Childrens Research Institute development board invites you and your family to Discovery Day a family picnic day hosted by our patron Dame Elisabeth Murdoch AC DBE in her beautiful gardens at Cruden Farm.

Sunday 24 February 2008 10am – 3pm

Tickets
$40 for adults, all children free. LIMITED TICKETS AVAILABLE. The event will go ahead in all weather, no refunds. Please take special care with children as there is an unfenced lake on the premises.

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What to expect
All kinds of musical performances, roving entertainers, music and dance workshops, SpongeBob Square Pants, Patrick Starfish & Dora the Explorer, clowns, face-painting, pony rides, animal farm, jumping castles, Dorothy the Dinosaur, DJ David Southwick plus many other stage shows, retail stalls, amazing raffle prizes and giveaways for all children.

What to bring
A rug & picnic. Food available on the day includes sausage sizzle, Splitrock drinks, Aded Flavour sandwiches & cupcakes, Gravity coffee, New Zealand Natural ice cream & sorbets, Sunny Ridge strawberries, Bird in Hand wines & Southern Bay Brewing Company beer.

Getting there
Cruden Farm, Langwarrin (enter via Cranhaven Road, Melway reference 103 G6)

100% of proceeds go directly to the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute.

Murdoch Childrens Research Institute conducts innovative research to help ensure all children lead happier, healthier lives.

Cruden Farm Project Group
Jackie Bursztyn, Romy Bursztyn, Susannah Calvert-Jones (chair), Narelle Curtis, Victoria Lord, Linda McNaughton, Jill Murray, Susie O’Neill, Candy Rosenbaum, Lana Sheezel, Ellie Smorgon, Michelle Wenzel.

Development Board
Lisa Bond, Susannah Calvert-Jones, Suzi Carp (chair), Narelle Curtis, Tony Davies, Ben James, Marisa Leone, Victoria Lord, Sarah Murdoch, Sam Patterson, Angus Reynolds, Emma, Rosenberg, Fiona Rowland.

For more information please visit www.mcri.edu.au

Helping Premature Babies Breathe Easier

I was forwarded a link to the Australian Synchrotron Science about a case study being performed by ~ The University of Queensland.

This is the information they provided on their website:

We need a layer of natural lung surfactant NLS that is just 1 molecule thick to breathe. Premature babies lack NLS.

  • Animal-based and synthetic alternatives are used to help babies breathe but better treatments are needed.
  • A team at The University of Queensland has used synchrotrons in the USA and Japan to provide critical information for understanding the structural changes that take place in NLS every time we breathe.
  • The aim is to create a safe, effective artificial lung surfactant that could be used to help premature babies and adults with lung problems.

Ronan was born with Chronic Lung Disease and was on oxygen for 3 months. I can only imagine how much better his lungs would have been had this been available when he was born. If successful this would be a HUGE step towards helping a premature baby and his/her lungs. From my understanding one of the biggest complications/issues with having a premature baby is their lungs because of the lack of lung surfactant if the baby is born before 30 weeks, although i could be wrong with my gestation calculation. The university is doing an amazing job and i look forward to hearing about it’s release here in Australia in the years to come.


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Coping post NICU

I rode the lift to the fifth floor just as I had every day for the first 148 days of my child’s life. This time however, was different. We were going back. Only for a follow up appointment but the squirming, uneasy sensation in my stomach and my sweaty palms didn’t seem to know that.

My heart pounded as the computerized voice declared “Fifth, fifth, floor, floor” and the doors slid open. We turned the corner and suddenly the corridor I’d walked down hundreds, possibly thousands of times, looked immensely longer than it ever had before and then there was the smell of the antibacterial hand soap. While Erin was in hospital I didn’t mind it, in fact I liked it, it reminded me of her, now though, it brings back the fear and hurt that I’d repressed while in the thick of things.

Since we’ve been home I’ve noticed a sharp increase of flash backs, crying spells and imaginings—I swear I sometimes hear patient monitors and alarms. I don’t know if what I’m experiencing is Post Traumatic Stress, “just” depression or something else entirely. Maybe this is one of those lovely “normal” things that NICU parents get to experience. Whatever it is it doesn’t feel normal.

When your baby’s in hospital you don’t have time to deal with the emotional baggage that piles up as a result of having an early and possibly sick baby. You simply don’t have time and if you go to pieces who’s going to deal with the hundred and one things you need to do to keep your life going? No one. So you keep going and your baggage keeps piling up until you come home with a baby who cries for no reason, wants to be held at all hours of the night, who either, doesn’t eat and doesn’t grow or wants to eat all the time but still doesn’t grow!

So now you’re a crazy bag lady with a baby tucked under your arm, nappies piled in the corner, bags under your eyes that could easily accommodate your NICU baggage and armpit hair down to your elbows from a months worth of showers aborted due to screaming! At some point you’re going to explode and it’s not going to be pretty.

But you don’t because if you do who’s going to look after the baby, the house, the husband and any other kids you may have and where did that cat come from? Instead you wait for that rare moment when the baby’s quiet and you’re FINALLY alone and you just cry or you don’t because you’re afraid that if you start to cry you may never stop. Instead you just go silently crazier.

There are no answers in this post. I don’t know how to deal with what I’m feeling; I don’t even know what to call it. Somehow I think finding a name would help.

Visit our forum and discuss how you’re coping now that you’re home

Could somebody please stop the roller coaster, I’d like to get off now

Three months after we left the Special Care Nursery, last week I finally ran into a brick wall, emotionally. Perversely, I think it is because the weather improved. All winter I complained about being stuck indoors due to the rain, but now the sun has come out I still can’t stop feeling fragile and anxious, to the point where some days I don’t want to go out, or do things I used to enjoy. And last Tuesday when my appointment to see the child health nurse was unexpectedly cancelled, I just sat on the sofa and cried.

It makes no sense, but all my emotional resilience just seems to have gone out the window. Although it was stressful, tiring and frustrating during Talia’s hospital stay, I just focused on the positive things and “soldiered on”. Taking her home opened up a range of new challenges, but they are what any new parent has to deal with. Mostly I think I am doing OK – but some days I am finding the hole just seems to be bigger than the doughnut.

We do have some issues. Talia is difficult to settle, often screaming and hardly sleeping during the day, which means both of us are cranky and frazzled by evening. I feed her on demand but she remains very small, even for her corrected age. She looks healthy but has only gained 1kg in the three months since she was discharged from hospital. This has been causing me a huge amount of worry, and last week it reached the point where I was clearly showing some of the symptoms of postnatal depression.

The NICU staff told me that mothers of prems are more likely than mothers of full term babies to suffer from postnatal depression (PND). My own mother suffered terribly from PND and I really don’t want to go there.

I hate to admit it, but I couldn’t stop crying as I phoned the hospital last week and asked to speak to someone about getting some help. I felt like a failure, even though I know it is not my fault. I also went through quite a few tissues while talking to my GP a few days later, but now I feel a sense of relief that, even if I don’t feel in control of things, I don’t have to try and cope with it all on my own.

I found the following websites helpful in learning more about PND

Rethink on breastfeeding, allergy link

TONY EASTELY: Australian researchers say if mothers exclusively breastfeed their babies and there is a family history of allergies, it may actually increase the babies’ chances of developing allergies in later life. The study authors say while breastfeeding has many other benefits, it will not protect children against asthma and allergies in the long-term. But some experts aren’t so convinced and they say the results of the study are inconclusive. Barbara Miller reports.

BARBARA MILLER: The current recommendation is that babies should be exclusively breastfed for six months. One of the most-cited benefits of the breast is best policy is that breastmilk helps protect against allergies.

But researchers from the University of Melbourne, who’ve carried out a longitudinal study on 8,500 people, say that’s not necessarily the case for babies where there’s a family history of allergies. Dr Melanie Matheson from the University’s School of Population Health.

MELANIE MATHESON: We found that breastfeeding in the first three months of life protected against asthma and allergic disease before the age of seven but it no longer protected against those conditions after the age of seven. Our study followed our cohort up until the age of 44 and we found that the risk of asthma and allergic disease continued to increase right up into middle age.

BARBARA MILLER: The researchers say the increased risk is small, but they say their work does call into question the current guidelines on breastfeeding. But some experts say the work is inconclusive. David Thomas is Chair of the Child Youth Health Committee at the Australian Medical Association.

DAVID THOMAS: Their study really needs to examine whether they’ve looked at all other external variables. Allergies later in life can be predisposed to by a number of other environmental impacts which are quite independent of breastfeeding. So, if they’ve found an association, they really need to look at all the other factors ’cause it may or may not be related to breastfeeding.

BARBARA MILLER: That’s a view shared by Dr Andrew Pesce, Clinical Director of Women’s Health at Westmead Hospital in Sydney.

ANDREW PESCE: Children who are exclusively breastfed are often being looked after in the home by their mother. They may have a lower incidence of going to childcare early in life and being exposed to various infections in life. Those infections may challenge the immune system and have effects, both harmful and beneficial possibly, that we don’t fully understand. Hygiene is another thing.

So, you know, there are a whole lot of potential compounding factors which make it really difficult to know what aspect of the breastfeeding and the link to allergies story is breastfeeding alone.

BARBARA MILLER: Do you think that women should change their behaviour based on the results of this study?

ANDREW PESCE: Look no. I think that, you know, this is an incremental addition to the understanding that the researching scientists are giving us and there’s nothing in this information which would make a woman have to think that she has to, you know, change what she’s been doing so far.

TONY EASTELY: Dr Andrew Pesce, Clinical Director of Women’s Health at Westmead Hospital. That report by Barbara Miller.

Transcript from ABC AM radio