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Management of Preterm, Small for Gestational Age Infants: Before Birth to Adolescence. Exploring the Maze. Pediatrician:. You are called to the high risk pregnancy unit for a consultation: Primigravida at 25 weeks Hypertensive: BP = 160/110 3+ proteinuria on dipstix Headache
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Management of Preterm, Small for Gestational Age Infants: Before Birth to Adolescence Exploring the Maze
Pediatrician: You are called to the high risk pregnancy unit for a consultation: • Primigravida at 25 weeks • Hypertensive: BP = 160/110 • 3+ proteinuria on dipstix • Headache • Peripheral oedema with 6kg weight gain in the past 4 weeks
Investigations: • Bloods: • Hb 140g/L • WCC 18,000 • Plats 103 x 109/L • MPV: 12.9 • Uric Acid 467 • AST 25 • Albumin 29
Investigations • Ultrasound: • EFW: 450g (HC at 5th %ile, AC and FL <1%ile) • AFI 76 • Umb arterial doppler: S/D ratio 7.2 • What else do you need to know? • What are you going to say?
Antenatal treatment with glucocorticoids: 50% reduction in RDS related mortality in later GA Willingness to perform c/section for >800g C/section for <800g associated with more handicap Obstetricians routinely underestimate neonatal prospects for survival and survival without handicap Obstetrical Determinants of Survival and Handicap
Perinatal Outcomes at 23 -28 wks GA1983-1989n=1024 Still birth rate Synnes et al, 1994
Perinatal Outcomes at 23 -28 wks GA1993-1997n=278 Still birth rate El-Metwally et al 2000
LDR Deaths Synnes et al, 1994
LDR Deaths El-Metwally et al 2000
Death < 7 days Synnes et al, 1994
Death 7 - >28 days Synnes et al, 1994
Survival to discharge Synnes et al, 1994
Survival to discharge El-Metwally et al 2000
Management Synnes et al, 1994
Major Morbidity and Mortality vs Birth Weight NICHHD, 2001
18 month outcomes for 25 wks GA Synnes et al, 1994
Other Factors to Consider • Multiple gestation • Gender • SGA • Antenatal steroids
Effect of SGA on Mortality:25 wks GA Synnes et al, 1994
Cognition and SGA vs AGA • Significantly greater cognitive and neurologic morbidity in SGA vs AGA • No differences by birth weight between the groups in cognitive performance or neurologic status • Cognitive impairment associated with neurologic abnormality in both groups • Higher incidence of neurologic deficit in SGA infants greater cognitive impairment in the SGA infants McCarton et al, 1996
SGA vs AGA with Neurologic Impairment Percentage of AGA and SGA preterms with cognitive retardation as a function of neurological status Cognitive test scores as a function of neurological status at 3 years in AGA and SGA preterms. McCarton et al, 1996
Patient DR • Resuscitated by resident with bag and mask positive pressure ventilation with 100% FiO2 • Pediatrician arrived at 1-2 minutes age • Infant was pink and crying without intubation • Neonatologist arrived at 10 minutes of age and full treatment was decided to be undertaken • Infant intubated in DR and transported to NICU • Apgars 6/7/8
Postpartum History • Vitals: temp 34.8 HR 144 RR 52 • Weight 480 g (<5%) • Length 28.5 cm (<5%) • HC 22 cm (5%) • Bruises over scalp buttocks • Hct 39%
NICU Course • Respiratory • HMD ventilated 25 days with 105 days O2 • BPD noted on day 27 • Apnea x 54 days treated with aminophylline • CNS: normal cranial u/s • OPHTHO: ROP grade 2 on day 64 • GU: bilateral inguinal hernia repair
NICU Course • FEN/MET • Hyperglycemia day 9 with insulin drip • Umbilical artery catherization, TPN • Osteopenia of prematurity day 38 • Low T4 associated prematurity • HEME: • Anemia of prematurity and iatrogenic loss • Multiple blood transfusions • GI: jaundice peak 7.8mg/dl onset day 2 • ID: suspected sepsis x 2
Impact of NICU Practices on the Developing Brain • Excess free radicals—O2, iron • High frequency ventilation with low lung volume? • Hypocarbia/hypercariba or rapidly changing PaCO2 levels? • Caffeine? • Postnatal steroids • Indomethacin ok? • Dopamine? • Sulfite preservatives? • High osmalality drugs? • Anesthetics and pain meds: fentanyl vs. morphine, versed? • Stimulation: visual, auditory, pain • Hyperthermia Gressens et al, 2002
Discharge • 42 ½ weeks gestational age • 113 days chronological age • 2440g • HC 35 cm • Length 43 cm • Meds: vits
4 months follow-up • Growth • 3400g (<3%) • length 51.9cm (<3%) • HC 40cm (10%) • Scars: right nasal notching, heel scars • Neurodevelopmental exam: • some decrease truncal tone • poor head control
8 months corrected age • Growth <5% • 5780g • Length 61.6cm • HC 42.7cm • Neurodevelopmental exam: • Slight decreased tone and strength • Poor balance • Immature uncoordinated grasp • Minimal vocalizations • Crab-crawls • Not pulling to stand • Eye exam normal
18 months corrected age • Growth (<5%) • 7590g • Length 72.5cm • 45.8cm • Neurodevelopmental exam: Bayley = 17month • Strongly right-handed • Babbling, using a few words • Abnormal movement: scooting on bottom using left arm • High activity, low persistence and short attention
3 years • Growth • 10.74 kg (-2.74 SD) • 88.4cm (-2.66 SD) • 47.5cm (-2.65 SD) • Neurodevelopment • Soft, hoarse voice referred to ENT for evaluation • Better expressive than receptive language • Difficulty following longer directions • Peabody motor scales 31 months: balance problems, right hand dominant, immature fine pincer • Stanford-Binet low average
4 ½ years • Growth • 11.8kg (-2.98 SD) • 96.2cm (-2.32 SD) • HC 47.8cm (-2.64 SD) • Bone age 4 years at 4 years 10 months • PET tubes • Neurodevelopment: “bounced around the room” • High pain tolerance • Slight incoordination • Right side preference • Cognition: 77% verbal; performance 8% • Nonverbal: 16% • Visual-motor: 9% • Visual-Motor Integration: 14%
8 years • Growth: • 23 kg (-1.19 SD) • Height 121cm (-1.69 SD) • HC 49.7cm (-1.64 SD) • Neurodevelopment: recommend learning assistance • Right-side dominant • Tight hamstrings • Brisk reflexes • Poor balance • Average cognitive, poor non cognitive • Poor recall of visual patterns/spelling • Poor arithmetic • Poor pencil use
14 years • Growth • 48.3kg (-2.38 SD) • 153.1cm (-1.39 SD) • 51.5cm (-2.43 SD) • Neurodevelopment • Psyched eval: complex learning problem especially with math • Poor output and distractible • Difficulty keeping on task • Verbal within normal range, better comprehension than expression • Performance 10%
Outcomes in Young Adulthood:Educational disadvantage associated with VLBW persists to early adulthood 20 year outcomes for 242 survivors mean 29.7 wks, 1179g vs. 233 controls with normal birth weight 51% normal IQs Fewer high school grads: 74% v 84% (p<0.04) Less postsecondary study: 30% v 53% (p<0.04) Subnormal height: 10% v 5% (p<0.04) Neurosensory impairments: 10% v 1% (p<0.001) Hack et al NEJM 2002