Results 191 to 200 of about 22,049 (220)
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Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1976
This article discusses the production, transport, and excretion of bilirubin in the newborn period. The causes, significance, and treatment of unconjugated and conjugated hyperbilirubinemia are different; and because this is so, it is important to review the main causes and management of unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia in
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This article discusses the production, transport, and excretion of bilirubin in the newborn period. The causes, significance, and treatment of unconjugated and conjugated hyperbilirubinemia are different; and because this is so, it is important to review the main causes and management of unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia in
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Phototherapy for Neonatal Jaundice
Clinics in Perinatology, 1991Exchange transfusion for severe neonatal jaundice is a tedious and expensive procedure with high morbidity and mortality rates, and is followed by a prompt and marked bilirubin rebound. It has largely been replaced by phototherapy, which though more gradual in its effect results in a prolonged reduction of the bilirubin concentration.
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Pediatrics, 1979
A report from the Center for Disease Control1 noted two outbreaks of idiopathic neonatal hyperbilirubinemia associated with the use of a phenolic disinfectant detergent, when used in higher than recommended concentrations. These outbreaks were examined in more detail by Wysowski et a12 at the Atlanta Center for Disease Control, confirming a temporal ...
Helen McK. Doan+2 more
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A report from the Center for Disease Control1 noted two outbreaks of idiopathic neonatal hyperbilirubinemia associated with the use of a phenolic disinfectant detergent, when used in higher than recommended concentrations. These outbreaks were examined in more detail by Wysowski et a12 at the Atlanta Center for Disease Control, confirming a temporal ...
Helen McK. Doan+2 more
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Phenobarbital for neonatal jaundice
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1970T H I S C O M M E N T A R Y is prompted by an increasing number of inquiries as to whether it is now indicated to treat hyperbilirubinemia with phenobarbital during the first week of life. In 1968 Catz and Yaffee 1 demonstrated that the conjugation and excretion of bilirubin could be increased significantly in newborn animals by giving sodium barbital ...
David E Fisher, Richard E. Behrman
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A Quisling on neonatal jaundice
Acta Paediatrica, 2006Abstract Background/methods: Nils Andreas Quisling was born in Telemark, Norway, in 1854 and became an obstetrician. In 1893 he published a monograph on neonatal jaundice. This monograph was studied and compared with other published sources from the same time period.
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NEONATAL JAUNDICE AND KERNICTERUS
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1954THE PURPOSE of this paper is to examine critically the available data bearing on the pathogenesis of kernicterus. During the past decade and a half, knowledge of the etiologic importance of incompatibility between the blood groups of the fetus and the mother has expanded rapidly.
M. Furuta+3 more
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Management of Neonatal Jaundice
The Nurse Practitioner, 1986Jaundice is the most commonly encountered neonatal clinical problem; 80 percent of neonates become clinically jaundiced, while 5 percent develop serum bilirubin levels above currently recommended treatment standards. This article outlines theories about the pathophysiology of neonatal jaundice and presents a logical approach to its management.
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Pediatrics, 1980
The articles by Wysowski et al (Pediatrics 61:165, 1978) and Doan et al (Pediatrics 64:324, 1979), implicating the use of a phenolic disinfectant in the nursery as a cause of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, led us to discontinue the use of phenolics and substitute chlorhexidine in its place.
Isacsohn M+2 more
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The articles by Wysowski et al (Pediatrics 61:165, 1978) and Doan et al (Pediatrics 64:324, 1979), implicating the use of a phenolic disinfectant in the nursery as a cause of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, led us to discontinue the use of phenolics and substitute chlorhexidine in its place.
Isacsohn M+2 more
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Neonatal jaundice and coagulopathy
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1985THIS INFANT GIRL was transferred to William Beaumont Hospital at 18 hours of age because of respiratory distress. 9 She was born by elective cesarean section to a 29year-old G2P1 mother in the thirty-seventh week of a pregnancy complicated by polyhydramnios. Apgar scores were 6 and 9 at 1 and 5 minutes, respectively.
Duane D. Harrison+3 more
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