Purpose
To review the neonatal cases with different types of minor blood group incompatible haemolytic diseases in China, and to improve the clinical understanding and management.
Materials and Methods
Seven cases from January, 1st, 2013 to December 31st, 2019 were searched out and reviewed retrospectively. All clinical data and laboratory findings were collected.
Results
There were totally seven cases enrolled including three cases of MNS, three of Diego, and one of Kidd combined with Rh, anti-RhE incompatibility. Among the seven cases, two had intrauterine transfusion, two underwent exchange transfusion, five received intravenous immune globulin, five cases developed anaemia, and three of them had transfusion. But among them, only four were found to have positive antibody screening and three were confirmed HDN with antibody types antenatally.
Conclusion
The clinical presentation is diverse. Antibody screening followed by the technique of peak systolic velocity in the fetal middle cerebral artery (MCA-PSV) helps to filter out the severe cases.
Background: Bloody stools in a neonate may stand for a spectrum of conditions ranging from benign to life-threatening. It is critical to detect the cases that have significant underlying pathology, especially those which require urgent surgical intervention. Previous studies always focused on one particular disease related to bloody stools in neonates, or the study only involved a small number of cases. This study aimed to investigate the common causes of bloody stools in neonates.Methods: This retrospective cohort study included the neonates admitted to our institution due to "bloody stools" over a 5-year period. We compared the differences among patients' characteristics, feeding choice, underlying diseases, and operation rate between preterm and term neonates.Results: A total of 300 patients were included, accounting for 1.1% of the total neonatal admissions. The overall rate of exclusive breastfeeding was 28.0%. The most common underlying causes for bloody stools were: cow's milk protein allergy (CMPA, 53.3%), swallowed blood syndrome (10.0%), viral enteritis (9.7%), necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) > stage II (8.3%), non-specific enteritis (7.3%), and anal fissure (5.0%). The median [interquartile range (IQR)] onset age for bloody stools for all infants was 12 (3-22) days after birth.Preterm neonates had a lower rate of exclusive breastfeeding (P=0.844), higher incidence of NEC > stage II (P=0.014), later bloody stools onset age (P<0.001), and longer length of hospital stay than term neonates (P<0.001). For neonates with NEC, those with bottle-fed had an earlier onset age for bloody stools than those with breast-fed (P=0.027). Only 1.7% (n=5) required surgery (2 stage III NEC, 1 post-NEC stricture, and 2 volvuli). Survival at hospital discharge was 100%.Conclusions: Bloody stools in neonates is generally a benign, self-limiting disorder, not related to surgical conditions. The overall operation rate among neonates with bloody stools was only 1.7%. CMPA and NEC were the most common underlying non-surgical and surgical diseases, respectively, for neonates with bloody stools. Feeding choice is related to bloody stools in neonates, policies and strategies to support breastfeeding should be strengthened in the future.
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