Prematurity and Neonatal Issues PDF

Summary

This document provides comprehensive information on prematurity, neonatal respiratory distress, hyperbilirubinemia, and related neonatal conditions. It details the physical characteristics and signs of prematurity, as well as potential problems associated with these conditions. The document also discusses the causes, symptoms, and treatment strategies for these conditions.

Full Transcript

# Prematurity ### Definition A live born infant who is delivered before 37 completed weeks of gestation calculated from the first day of the last menstrual period. ### Physical characteristics: - Decreased - **Body measurements**: - Birth weight < 2500 gm. - Crown-heel length < 47 cm. -...

# Prematurity ### Definition A live born infant who is delivered before 37 completed weeks of gestation calculated from the first day of the last menstrual period. ### Physical characteristics: - Decreased - **Body measurements**: - Birth weight < 2500 gm. - Crown-heel length < 47 cm. - Head circumference < 33 cm. - Chest circumference < 30 cm. - The head is disproportionately large relative to the body size but the neck and extremities are relatively short and the abdomen is protruding. - **Signs of physical immaturity**: - **Cry**: feeble and infrequent with poor suckling. - **Behavior**: sleeps more or less continuously with infrequent muscular movements. - **Skin**: Thin, smooth and red skin. Little subcutaneous fat: triangular face and loose skin over the limbs. Abundant lanugo hair that may cover the whole body. Frequent occurrence of edema hands and feet. - **Chest**: soft chest wall with weak respiratory muscles. Irregular respiration with periodic spells of apnea. - **Abdomen**: prominent with thin wall and visible peristalsis. - **Breast**: not palpable nodule, with diminished areola and nipple formation. - **Ear**: soft, easily folded with absent cartilage. - **Genitalia**: - **Male**: light colored, smooth scrotum with absent rugae, and undescended testes. - **Female**: widely separated labia majora with prominent labia minora and clitoris. - **Signs of neuromuscular immaturity**: # Problems of prematurity: 1. **Respiratory**: Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) 2. **Neurologic**: intracranial hemorrhage 3. **Cardiovascular**: A patent ductus arteriosus is a common problem that may result in congestive heart failure. 4. **Hematological problems**: There is increased hemorrhagic tendency due to: Increased vascular fragility 5. **Anemia of prematurity**: 6. **Nutritional and Feeding problems due to**: - Impaired suckling and swallowing. 7. **Gastrointestinal problems**: Prematurity is the single greatest risk factor for necrotizing enterocolitis. 8. **Metabolic problems**: disorder in glucose and calcium metabolism, are more common in premature infants. 9. **Renal**: The immature kidney is characterized by a low glomerular filtration rate and an inability to handle water, solute, and acid loads. 10. **Temperature regulation**: Premature infants are especially susceptible to hypothermia and hyperthermia. 11. **Immunologic**: Because of deficiencies in both humoral and cellular immune response, premature infants are a greater risk for infection than are full-term infants. 12. **Ophthalmologic**: Retinopathy of prematurity may develop in the immature retina. # Neonatal Respiratory Distress - **Signs**: - Tachypnea (more than 60 min). - Retraction (intercostal and subcostal). - Expiratory grunting. - Cyanosis - **Causes**: - **Pulmonary diseases**: - Hyaline membrane disease and transient tachypnea of the newborn. - Aspiration syndrome. - Pneumonia. - Airleak syndromes: pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum. - **Obstruction or abnormality of air Passages.** - Nasal or nasopharyngeal: choanal atresia. - Laryngeal: Laryngomalacia. - **Impaired respiratory center and nerve Pathway function**: - Immaturity. - Neuromuscular disorders. - **Extrapulmonary causes.** - Diaphragmatic hernia. - Metabolic acidosis. - Cardiac: congenital heart disease, heart failure. # Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia - **Types**: - **Unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia (indirect)** - physiological - Pathological like: - Hemolytic anemia of newborn - Hemorrhage - Breast milk jaundice - Others - **Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia (direct)** - Hepatitis. - Biliary obstruction. - Others - **Physiologic Jaundice**: In almost every newborn infant, elevation of serum unconjugated bilirubin develops during the first week of life and resolves spontaneously. - **Exclusion criteria for physiologic jaundice**: - Unconjugated bilirubin level > 12.9 mg/dl in term infants - Unconjugated bilirubin level > 15mg/dl in preterm infants - Bilirubin level increasing at a rate > 5 mg/dl/day. - Jaundice in the first day of life - Conjugated bilirubin > 2 mg/dl - Clinical jaundice persisting > 1 week in full-term or > 2 weeks in preterm infants. - **Pathological jaundice criteria**: the reverse of physiological jaundice # Rh hemolytic disease of the newborn (Rh-HDN): If an Rh-ve mother get pregnant to an Rh +ve fetus, leakage of fetal RBCs across the placenta into the maternal circulation may lead to formation of maternal IgG antibodies directed against fetal antigens. It occur in 2nd and third pregnancy. # ABO-hemolytic disease of the newborn: ABO-HDN is caused by the reaction of maternal anti-A or anti-B antigens on the RBCs of the fetus or newborn infants. It is usually seen in A or B infants born to type O mothers. # Breast milk jaundice: It is characterized by high peak (10-30 mg/dl), peaking by days 10-15 of life and slower decline in the serum bilirubin concentration. - **Treatment:** - Phototherapy - Exchange transfusion - Phenobarbital # Kernicterus (Bilirubin encephalopathy) ### Definition: Is a pathologic diagnosis refers to yellow staining of the brain by bilirubin together with evidence of neuronal injury. ### Treatment: If kernicterus is suspected, treatment is immediate exchange transfusion, preceded by phototherapy until exchange starts.

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