# The myofascial release as neuromotor support to improve the ineffective sucking ability in term infants: a preliminary study

**Authors:** Andrea Arcusio, Maria Cristina Villa, Federica Felloni, Claudio Migliori

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13052-024-01611-2 · Italian Journal of Pediatrics · 2024-04-05

## TL;DR

This study shows that osteopathic treatment with myofascial release can improve sucking ability and breastfeeding success in newborns.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel osteopathic approach combining myofascial release and neuromotor facilitation for improving sucking in infants.

## Key findings

- Treated infants showed significantly more valid and continuous suctions after seven days.
- Exclusive breastfeeding was maintained longer in the treated group compared to the untreated group.
- No differences in growth or health were observed between the groups.

## Abstract

Breastfeeding plays a primary role in the events that characterize the development of the relationship between a mother and her newborn. However, this essential process sometimes does not fully cover the nutritional requirements of the newborn due to altered biomechanical sucking skills. In this context, adequate osteopathic treatment associated with neuromotor facilitation techniques could play a promoting role.

This study evaluated the effect of the osteopathic approach using myofascial release on 26 infants with ineffective sucking ability, identified by the POFRAS scale and LATCH score, compared with 26 untreated similar infants. After the procedure was initially performed in the hospital, the strategy based on basic neuromotor patterns was taught to the parents to be continued at home. The effects were measured at hospital discharge, during the first outpatient visit, which occurred after about seven days, and at one month of life.

The number of valid and continuous suctions, initially less than five per feed in both groups, at the first outpatient check-up was significantly higher (p < 0.00001) in the treated group. Exclusive breastfeeding, initially present in all enrolled children, was maintained mainly in treated children, both at discharge (p < 0.003), at outpatient follow-up (p < 0.00001), and at one month of life (p < 0.00001). Differences in growth and health conditions were not found between the groups.

We believe that osteopathic treatment associated with neuromotor facilitation techniques can optimize newborns’ sucking skills, improving the acquisition and duration of breastfeeding.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10998315/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10998315