Placenta-related IUGR does not have a significant impact on preschool neurodevelopment in our preterm patients. Instead, post-natal positive environmental factors such as parental educational level, breastfeeding, and daycare attendance make a difference towards an improvement in neurodevelopment in these infants.
Segmental renal infarction (SRI) is a rare condition that causes renovascular hypertension (RVH), which accounts for 8-10% of all causes of pediatric hypertension. We report the clinical course of two children with idiopathic SRI who suffered severe arterial hypertension associated with hyponatremia. Hypertension was diagnosed during the study of hematuria in the first case and due to a hypertensive emergency in the second case. The etiology was found to be renovascular in both patients, involving the occlusion of small renal arteries and causing SRI. Our first patient was treated with partial nephrectomy, and the second patient was treated with antihypertensive medication given the impossibility of removing the infarcted renal area. The occlusion of small renal arteries is a rare disease of unknown origin in which the gold standard for diagnosis is selective renal arteriography. The definitive treatment is surgical segmentectomy. If segmentectomy is not feasible because of the localization of the infarcted area, as in our second patient, medical treatment is required. In view of the importance of RVH in children and the rareness of the particular etiology here reported (SRI), a review of the literature was done.
The aim of our report is to generate awareness of the possible association between methamphetamine abuse during pregnancy and central nervous system malformations.
It is necessary to treat neonatal pain because it may have short-and long-term adverse effects. Frenotomy is a painful procedure where sucking, a common strategy to relieve pain, cannot be used because the technique is performed on the tongue. In a previous randomized clinical trial, we demonstrated that inhaled lavender essential oil (LEO) reduced the signs of pain during neonatal frenotomy. We aimed to find out whether inhaled vanilla essential oil (VEO) is more effective in reducing pain during frenotomy than LEO. Randomized clinical trial with neonates who underwent a frenotomy for type 3 tongueties between May and October 2021. Pain was assessed using pre and post-procedure heart rate (HR) and oxygen saturation (SatO2), crying time, and NIPS score. Neonates were randomized into "experimental" and "control" group. In both groups, we performed swaddling, administered oral sucrose, and let the newborn suck for 2 min. We placed a gauze pad with one drop of LEO (control group) or of VEO (experimental group) under the neonate's nose for 2 min prior to and during the frenotomy. We enrolled 142 neonates (71 per group). Both groups showed similar NIPS scores (2.02 vs 2.38) and crying times (15.3 vs 18.7 s). We observed no differences in HR increase or in SatO2 decrease between both groups. We observed no side effects in either of the groups.Conclusions: We observed no appreciable difference between LEO and VEO; therefore, we cannot conclude which of them was more effective in treating pain in neonates who underwent a frenotomy.Trial registration: This clinical trial is registered with www. clini caltr ials. gov with NCT04867824.
What is Known:• Pain management is one of the most important goals of neonatal care as it can have long-term neurodevelopmental effects.• Lavender essential oil can help relieve pain due to its sedative, antispasmodic, and anticolic properties.What is New:• Lavender and vanilla essential oils are safe, beneficial, easy to use, and cheap in relieving pain in neonates who undergo a frenotomy for type 3 tongue-ties.
We did not find any statistically significant differences in the clinical features of the two treatment groups, nor in the main efficacy, morbidity, and mortality results.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.