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R
E S E A R C H
Massage and Exercise
Improve Bone Mineralization in Premature Infants
Daily physical activity and massage
help increase bone mineralization in premature infants, according
to recent research.
“Physical Activity Combined with
Massage Improves Bone Mineralization in Premature Infants: A Randomized
Trial” was conducted by staff at George Washington University
Hospital and Children’s National Medical Center, in Washington,
D.C.; and the Ain Shams University School of Medicine, in Cairo,
Egypt.
Thirty premature infants with a gestational
age of 35 weeks or less and a postnatal age of less than two weeks
participated in the study. The infants were randomly assigned to
either the control group or the activity group, where they received
physical activity and massage.
Daily range-of-motion exercises with
gentle compression and extension/flexion to the upper and lower
extremities composed the exercise in the activity group. Five repetitions
of each movement were performed on the infants’ wrists, elbows,
shoulders, ankles, knees and hips.
The massage portion of the activity group
consisted of slow, gentle strokes to each part of the infants’
body. While prone, the infant was stroked for one minute from the
head and face to the neck; one minute from the neck across the shoulders;
one minute from the upper back to the waist; one minute from the thigh
to the foot on both legs; and one minute from the shoulder to the
hand and back to the shoulder on both arms.
Exercise and massage were provided
to each infant until they reached a weight of approximately four
pounds. The control group did not receive any intervention. Type
of feeding was recorded for both groups, including the amount of
calories, calcium, phosphorus and protein given per day.
Outcome measures were C-terminal procollagen
peptide (PICP), urine pryidinoline (urine Pyd), serum calcium, alkaline
phosphatase and parathyroid hormone (PTH), which are biomarkers
of bone formation and resorption. These were measured at the start
of the study and when they reached approximately four pounds of
body weight.
Results of the study showed that mean
PICP concentration was significantly higher for the activity group
at the end of the study, as compared to the control group. Mean
PICP had increased in the activity group and decreased in the control
group.
Mean PTH levels were also significantly
higher for the activity group at the end of the study, as compared
to the control group. Increases in these substances indicate an
increase in bone mineralization.
Serum calcium and urine Pyd increased
for both groups over the course of the study, and serum alkaline
phosphatase did not change significantly for either group.
“Physical activity combined with
infant massage stimulates bone formation in premature infants as
evidenced by an increase in PICP, a biochemical marker of bone formation,
and an increase in PTH activity, which may further stimulate bone
growth and mineralization,” state the study’s authors.
- Source: George
Washington University Hospital and Children’s National Medical
Center in Washington, D.C.; Ain Shams University School of Medicine
in Cairo, Egypt. Authors: Hany Aly, M.D., Mohamed F. Moustafa, Sahar
M. Hassanein, An N. Massaro, Hanna A. Amer and Kantilal Patel. Originally
published in Journal of Perinatology, 2004, Vol. 24, pp.
305-309.
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