Results 261 to 270 of about 238,427 (303)
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Anemia in Preterm Infants

Pediatrics In Review, 1996
During fetal life, hemoglobin concentration increases from a level of 9 g/dL at l0 weeks' to 14 to 15 g/dL at 22 to 24 weeks' gestation. By the middle of the third trimester, concentrations close to those observed at birth (16 to 17 g/dL) are reached, and little additional change occurs.
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Priapism in preterm infant

Urology, 1977
This report of transient priapism in a preterm newborn with respiratory distress syndrome discusses clinical course, therapy, possible etiologic factors, and previously reported cases in newborns. Possible causes include use of arterial catheter, red cell transfusion, hemodynamic changes from a patent ductus arteriosus, and hypoxia.
R N, Amlie, B, Bourgeois, R F, Huxtable
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The nutrition of preterm infants

Early Human Development, 2012
Although great efforts have been made to improve neonatal nutrition in very low birthweight (VLBW) infants, many do not receive adequate nutrient intake and thus develop extrauterine growth restriction. In order to minimize the interruption of nutrients that occurs at birth, an "aggressive" nutritional approach has been proposed.
DE CURTIS, MARIO, Rigo J.
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Stimulation of Preterm Infants

Pediatrics In Review, 1988
Preterm neonates are deprived of their final weeks in utero and may also be deprived of appropriate extrauterine stimulation. The environment of the incubator features bright light and continuous noise, and the neonates are handled infrequently and only briefly.
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Immunonutrition for Preterm Infants

Neonatology, 2019
Care and outcomes for very preterm infants continue to improve, but important causes of mortality and acute and long-term morbidity associated with prolonged hospitalisation remain. Necrotising enterocolitis (NEC) and late-onset infection have emerged as the major causes of death beyond the early neonatal period and of neurodisability in very preterm ...
Verena, Walsh, William, McGuire
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Cholecystitis in a Preterm Infant

Clinical Pediatrics, 1986
Chez un nouveau-ne ne a 28 semaines de gestation avec un poids de 730 g. Des signes de dysplasie bronchopulmonaire moderee ont motive la prescription de furosemide. L'association de ce medicament a l'alimentation parenterale pourrait avoir provoque la formation de calculs compliquee de cholecystite.
C, Bunyapen, C G, Howell, W P, Kanto
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The electroretinogram in preterm infants

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1988
With the hope that the electroretinogram (ERG) in preterm infants could help clarify their vitamin A requirements, a technique for recording the full-field ERG in the neonate is described. One hundred seventy-seven ERGs were performed in 59 preterm and 52 term infants.
H, Mactier   +4 more
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Outcomes in preterm infants

Public Health, 2014
Preterm birth is defined as birth before 37 completed weeks gestation, and it is estimated that each day, across the world over 41,000 infants are born before this gestational age. The risk of adverse consequences declines with increasing gestational age.
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Cholestasis in Preterm Infants

Clinics in Perinatology, 2016
Cholestasis in preterm infants has a multifactorial etiology. Risk factors include degree of prematurity, lack of enteral feeding, intestinal injury, prolonged use of parenteral nutrition (PN), and sepsis. Soy-based parenteral lipid emulsions have been implicated in the pathophysiology of PN-associated liver injury. Inflammation plays an important role.
Katie, Satrom, Glenn, Gourley
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Seizures in Preterm Infants

Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 2016
Summary: Infants born prematurely are highly vulnerable to brain injury and susceptible to seizures in the first weeks of life. Many neonatal seizures occur without reliable clinical signs and are detectable only on electroencephalogram (EEG); understanding EEG findings in these neonates is crucial for providing appropriate care.
Jacobs-LeVan, Julia, Spelbrink, Emily M.
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