Results 211 to 220 of about 25,450 (255)
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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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Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 1984
The frequency and etiology of neonatal jaundice in the developing countries may differ from those of the developed countries due to racial differences and other confounding factors such as sepsis prematurity rate birth trauma and the incidence of anoxic conditions like the respiratory distress syndrome.
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The frequency and etiology of neonatal jaundice in the developing countries may differ from those of the developed countries due to racial differences and other confounding factors such as sepsis prematurity rate birth trauma and the incidence of anoxic conditions like the respiratory distress syndrome.
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Neonatal Jaundice and Kernicterus
Pediatrics, 2001* Abbreviations: AAP = : American Academy of Pediatrics • G-6-PD = : glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Subcommittee on Hyperbilirubinemia is currently revising the practice parameter (guidelines) on neonatal hyperbilirubinemia published in October 1994.1 Although this revision is in ...
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Baillière's Clinical Haematology, 1992
Neonatal jaundice is a major clinical problem globally, especially in the Asian and south-east Asian regions. There is no universal definition of hyperbilirubinaemia, and comparisons of management and control of hyperbilirubinaemia in infants at different centres are difficult.
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Neonatal jaundice is a major clinical problem globally, especially in the Asian and south-east Asian regions. There is no universal definition of hyperbilirubinaemia, and comparisons of management and control of hyperbilirubinaemia in infants at different centres are difficult.
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The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 1975
The frequency of Rh negativity in the hospital based population was 6%. Cord blood estimations in normal infants showed a mean haemoglobin level of 17.3 G., bilirubin 2.2 mg.%, reticulocyte count 3.5% and normoblast count 3.5%. 110 infants with jaundice in the newborn period were investigated.
P, Chandra +2 more
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The frequency of Rh negativity in the hospital based population was 6%. Cord blood estimations in normal infants showed a mean haemoglobin level of 17.3 G., bilirubin 2.2 mg.%, reticulocyte count 3.5% and normoblast count 3.5%. 110 infants with jaundice in the newborn period were investigated.
P, Chandra +2 more
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Neonatal Nonhemolytic Jaundice
New England Journal of Medicine, 1975NUMEROUS causes of nonhemolytic jaundice are encountered during the first month of life. Two groups of patients are distinguished: those with unconjugated and those with conjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Unconjugated Hyperbilirubinemia (Table 1) "Physiologic jaundice" is the most common form of unconjugated, nonhemolytic hyperbilirubinemia in the neonatal
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Maternal and neonatal factors associated with neonatal jaundice in Jordan: a case-control study
Background/Aims: Neonatal jaundice is a common cause of hospitalisation. This study aimed to identify maternal and neonatal factors associated with neonatal jaundice among hospitalised neonates in north Jordan.
Halasa, Suhaila +10 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.
R, Kurnetz +3 more
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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: phototherapy.
BMJ clinical evidence, 2015About 50% of term and 80% of preterm babies develop jaundice, which usually appears 2 to 4 days after birth, and resolves spontaneously after 1 to 2 weeks. Jaundice is caused by bilirubin deposition in the skin. Most jaundice in newborn infants is a result of increased red cell breakdown and decreased bilirubin excretion.We conducted a systematic ...
Woodgate, Paul, Jardine, Luke Anthony
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