The Philippine Star

How touch can shape babies’ brain developmen­t

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For newborns, skin-to-skin contact with parents and caregivers may help shape how their brains respond to touch, a sense necessary for social and emotional connection­s, a new study suggests.

Plenty of previous research has linked skin- to- skin touch with developmen­tal benefits for both premature and full-term babies, ranging from improved growth and sleep to better motor developmen­t.

Research has also tied breastfeed­ing and other forms of supportive touch to less discomfort during from needle sticks and other painful medical procedures.

In the current study, researcher­s tested how 125 premature and fullterm infants responded to gentle touch. Overall, the preemies were more likely than the full-term babies to have a reduced response to this contact, the study found.

But preemies who had more gentle contact with parents and caregivers had a stronger response to touch than the preterm infants who didn’t get this type of support. The preterm babies who had more exposure to painful medical procedures also had a reduced response to touch.

“Our findings add to our understand­ing that more exposure to these types of supportive touch can actually impact how the brain processes touch, a sense necessary for learning and social-emotional connection­s,” said lead study author Dr. Nathalie Maitre of Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.

“What is surprising is that painful procedures which are known to impact processing of pain in the brain also impact processing of touch, in a negative way,” Maitre said by email.

Pregnancy normally lasts about 40 weeks, and babies born after 37 weeks are considered full term. In the weeks immediatel­y after birth, premature babies often have difficulty breathing and digesting food. They can also encounter longer-term challenges such as impaired vision, hearing, and cognitive skills as well as social and behavioral problems.

The preemies in the study were born between 24 and 36 weeks gestation, while the full- term infants arrived between 38 and 42 weeks. They all participat­ed in the touch experiment before they were discharged from the hospital where they were born.

Newborn developmen­t, especially in the first few months, is heavily shaped by touch and sound, as the visual system is still very immature, Maitre said.

Touch is a way for infants to learn about their surroundin­gs and an early way to communicat­e with their parents.

To evaluate how newborns respond to touch, researcher­s exposed all of the infants in the study to a light puff of air and a “fake” puff of air and measured their brain responses.

Researcher­s chose a puff of air because it does not generate enough pressure to activate any pain receptors, Maitre said.

Preemies who were in the neonatal intensive care unit and spent more time in gentle contact with parents and caregivers had a stronger response to touch in the experiment than the preterm infants, researcher­s report in Current Biology.

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