Among infants ≥28 weeks' gestational age, HHHFNC appears to have similar efficacy and safety to nCPAP when applied immediately postextubation or early as initial noninvasive support for respiratory dysfunction.
Objectives: Thrombocytopenia is common in neonatal intensive care units (NICU), with 18 to 35% of patients developing this problem before hospital discharge. It might be even more common among extremely low birth weight neonates (ELBW, p1000 g birth weight). However, little is known about thrombocytopenia in the ELBW population. We sought to determine the incidence, timing, causes, platelet transfusions given, and outcomes of thrombocytopenia among ELBW neonates. Results: Multiple platelet counts were obtained in all 284 (range, 4 to 441 platelet counts/patient). Of the 284, 208 (73%) had one or more platelet counts p150 000/ml. Most were detected during the first days of life; 80% were detected during the first week and only 20% were detected thereafter. Thrombcytopenia was more common among the smallest patients; 85% incidence among those p800 g, 60% among those 801 to 900 g, and 53% among those 901 to 1000 g. Platelet transfusions were given to 129 of the 208 thrombocytopenic neonates. More than 90% were given prophylactically (the patient was not bleeding). The mortality rate among those that received platelet transfusions was twice that of those that received no platelet transfusions (P<0.01). In 48% of cases, the cause of the thrombocytopenia went undiagnosed. The most common explanations were being small for gestational age or delivered to a hypertensive mother, DIC, bacterial infection, fungal infection, and necrotizing enterocolitis, respectively. Conclusions:We observed thrombocytopenia among ELBW neonates at a rate more than twice that reported among the general NICU population. Much remains to be discovered about the etiology and best treatments of thrombocytopenia among ELBW neonates.
Neurodevelopmental childhood outcome after early intervention HFOV was normal and not different compared with patients who were treated with CV. Surfactant replacement combined with early HFOV using a lung recruitment strategy ameliorates the acute lung injury in respiratory distress syndrome that predisposes some preterm infants to develop chronic lung disease.
Objective: In the past 5½ years, 30 term or near-term neonates in the Intermountain Healthcare system developed necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) Bell's stage XII. We sought to identify possible explanations for why these patients developed NEC, by comparing them with 5847 others that did not develop NEC, from the same hospitals and of the same gestational ages, cared for during the same 5½-year period.Study design: Data were collected from neonates admitted to any of the Intermountain Healthcare NICUs with a birth date from 1 January 2001 to 30 June 2006, and a gestational age >36 weeks. A variety of patient features and feeding practices were compared between those that did vs did not develop NEC.Result: Forty-one neonates >36 weeks gestation were listed in the discharge records as having NEC of Bell's stage II or higher. However, on review of these 41 medical records, 11 were seen to have had NEC of Bell's stage I, whereas the remaining 30 had radiographs and clinical courses indicative of Bell's stage XII. Those 30 formed the basis of this study. Twenty-eight of the 30 developed NEC after having been admitted to an NICU for some other reason; the other two developed NEC at home, within 2 days of being discharged from an NICU. The 30 that developed NEC were more likely than the 5847 that did not develop NEC, to have congenital heart disease (P ¼ 0.000), polycythemia (P ¼ 0.002), earlyonset bacterial sepsis (P ¼ 0.004) or hypotension (P ¼ 0.017). All 30 received enteral feedings before NEC developed; 29 were fed either artificial formula or a mixture of formula and breast milk. The one that was exclusively fed human milk was fed human milk with added fortifier (24 cal/oz). The 30 that developed NEC were more likely to be fed formula exclusively (P ¼ 0.000). Seven of the 30 had a laparotomy for NEC; two of the seven had total bowel necrosis and support was withdrawn. The other five had perforations and bowel resections. The mortality rate was 13% (4/30). Conclusion:In our series, NEC among term or near-term neonates was exclusively a complication developing among patients already admitted to a NICU for some other reason. We speculate that the combination of reduced mesenteric perfusion and feeding with artificial formula were factors predisposing them to develop NEC.
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