High-flow nasal cannula therapy for infants with bronchiolitis

Mar 20, 2024The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Using high-flow nasal oxygen to help infants with bronchiolitis breathe

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Abstract

In a review of 16 randomized controlled trials involving 2813 infants, high-flow nasal cannula therapy may reduce the length of hospital stay by an average of 0.65 days compared to low-flow oxygen therapy.

  • High-flow nasal cannula therapy may lead to a reduction in the duration of oxygen therapy by an average of 0.59 days.
  • Improvements in respiratory rate at one and 24 hours, and heart rate at one, four to six, and 24 hours, are probably observed with high-flow therapy compared to pre-intervention baselines.
  • There may be a reduced risk of treatment escalation for infants receiving high-flow oxygen compared to those on low-flow therapy.
  • No significant differences in the incidence of adverse events were found between high-flow and low-flow oxygen therapy.

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