17 research outputs found
The smallest of the small: short-term outcomes of profoundly growth restricted and profoundly low birth weight preterm infants
ObjectiveSurvival of preterm and very low birth weight (VLBW) infants has steadily improved. However, the rates of mortality and morbidity among the very smallest infants are poorly characterized.Study designData from the California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative for the years 2005 to 2012 were used to compare the mortality and morbidity of profoundly low birth weight (ProLBW, birth weight 300 to 500 g) and profoundly small for gestational age (ProSGA, <1st centile for weight-for-age) infants with very low birth weight (VLBW, birth weight 500 to 1500 g) and appropriate for gestational age (AGA, 5th to 95th centile for weight-for-age) infants, respectively.ResultData were available for 44 561 neonates of birth weight <1500 g. Of these, 1824 were ProLBW and 648 were ProSGA. ProLBW and ProSGA differed in their antenatal risk factors from the comparison groups and were less likely to receive antenatal steroids or to be delivered by cesarean section. Only 14% of ProSGA and 21% of ProLBW infants survived to hospital discharge, compared with >80% of AGA and VLBW infants. The largest increase in mortality in ProSGA and ProLBW infants occurred prior to 12 h of age, and most mortality happened in this time period. Survival of the ProLBW and ProSGA infants was positively associated with higher gestational age, receipt of antenatal steroids, cesarean section delivery and singleton birth.ConclusionSurvival of ProLBW and ProSGA infants is uncommon, and survival without substantial morbidity is rare. Survival is positively associated with receipt of antenatal steroids and cesarean delivery
Factors associated with follow-up of infants with hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy in a high-risk infant clinic in California
Predictive value of early EEG for seizures in neonates with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy undergoing therapeutic hypothermia.
OBJECTIVES: To assess the prognostic significance of an early normal/mildly abnormal conventional EEG (cEEG) on seizure risk in neonates undergoing therapeutic hypothermia. METHODS: We reviewed the video-EEG recordings from a large cohort of neonates treated with therapeutic hypothermia for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy from 2008 to 2017 in a single tertiary center. Continuous video-EEG was started as soon as possible (median 8.2 h) and continued throughout hypothermia and rewarming. We studied those neonates with a normal/mildly abnormal EEG during the first 24 h of monitoring. RESULTS: A total of 331 neonates were treated with hypothermia and 323 had cEEG recordings available for review; 99 were excluded because of a moderately/severely abnormal cEEG background and/or seizure during the first 24 h of recording, and an additional eight because of early rewarming. The remaining 216 had a normal/mildly abnormal cEEG in the first 24 h. None of these patients subsequently developed seizures. CONCLUSION: A normal/mildly abnormal cEEG during the first 24 h indicates a very low risk of subsequent seizures. This suggests that cEEG monitoring can be safely discontinued after 24 h if it has remained normal or excessively discontinuous and no seizures are detected, limiting the need for this resource-intensive and expensive tool
