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Spinal anesthesia in an extremely low birth weight infant
Paediatric Anaesthesia, 2005SummaryA case of spinal anesthesia in an extremely low birth weight male infant (body weight of 930 g at time of surgery) is presented. He was born prematurely at a gestational age of 27 weeks because of a placenta tumor and had to undergo inguinal herniotomy at 34 weeks postconceptional age.
U S, Nickel, R R, Meyer, A M, Brambrink
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A rare case of extremely low birth weight infant with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome [PDF]
Kohei Kawaguchi +2 more
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Management of extremely low‐birth‐weight infants
Acta Paediatrica, 1992Better health care of women during pregnancy and delivery, improvement in neonatal intensive therapy and technology have led to a decrease in neonatal mortality and morbidity and to lower limits of birth weight and gestational age for survival. This paper refers to the management protocol used in the Department of Perinatal Pathology of the Provincial ...
C, Coccia +3 more
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Outcomes of Extremely Low Birth Weight Infants
Pediatrics, 1996Background. Our goal was to determine the effects of recent changes in delivery room and neonatal care, including surfactant and dexamethasone therapy, on survival, neonatal morbidity, and 20-month neurodevelopmental outcome of infants with birth weights of less than 750 g. Methods. We compared the outcomes of 114 infants of 500 to 750 g
M, Hack, H, Friedman, A A, Fanaroff
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Peritoneal dialysis in an extremely low-birth-weight infant with acute kidney injury [PDF]
Lyndsay A Harshman +2 more
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Fosphenytoin in infants of extremely low birth weight
Pediatric Neurology, 2001Fosphenytoin, a phosphorylated prodrug of phenytoin, is useful for acute seizures, is given by parenteral administration, and has few cardiac and local irritation adverse effects. There is limited experience in the administration of this new agent to newborns, and concern has been raised regarding the conversion of the prodrug to phenytoin. In two low--
R L, Kriel, R F, Cifuentes
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Hyperglycemia in Extremely- Low-Birth-Weight Infants
Neonatology, 1998The cause of hyperglycemia in extremely-low-birth-weight (ELBW) infants is not well understood. We studied infants weighing <1,000 g to investigate the relationship of hyperglycemia to blood levels of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and IGF-II. We also compared two methods of treatment for hyperglycemia: continuous insulin infusion and reduction ...
W, Meetze +3 more
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Extremely Low Birth Weight Infant (Gestational Age of 29 Weeks) With Kabuki Syndrome Type I: Case Report and Literature Review [PDF]
Jiang Xue
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Pulmonary Outcome in Extremely Low Birth Weight Infants
Pediatrics, 2000Objective.To determine whether infants with hyaline membrane disease (HMD) superimposed on immature lung disease (ILD) have more abnormal lung function and respiratory drive during the evolution of chronic neonatal lung disease (CNLD) in extremely low birth weight infants (ELBW; <1000 g).Methods.We measured lung mechanics (respiratory frequency,
D A, Fitzgerald +3 more
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Urinary acidification in extremely low birth weight infants
Early Human Development, 2002Premature infants often present metabolic acidosis without protein load in the early neonatal period, around days 4-6. In order to elucidate the cause of acidosis, we investigated urinary acidification of infants in the early neonatal period. Urine pH, fractional excretion of HCO(3)(-) (FEHCO(3)), excretion of HCO(3)(-) and NH(4)(+) of the appropriate ...
Takashi, Sato +7 more
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