scholarly journals Delivery Room Management of Asphyxiated Term and Near-Term Infants

Neonatology ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Marlies Bruckner ◽  
Gianluca Lista ◽  
Ola D. Saugstad ◽  
Georg M. Schmölzer

Approximately 800,000 newborns die annually due to birth asphyxia. The resuscitation of asphyxiated term newly born infants often occurs unexpected and is challenging for healthcare providers as it demands experience and knowledge in neonatal resuscitation. Current neonatal resuscitation guidelines often focus on resuscitation of extremely and/or very preterm infants; however, the recommendations for asphyxiated term newborn infants differ in some aspects to those for preterm infants (i.e., respiratory support, supplemental oxygen, and temperature management). Since the update of the neonatal resuscitation guidelines in 2015, several studies examining various resuscitation approaches to improve the outcome of asphyxiated infants have been published. In this review, we discuss current recommendations and recent findings and provide an overview of delivery room management of asphyxiated term newborn infants.

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-4

Introduction: With the advent of technological advancement and better scientific understanding it is possible now to successfully resuscitate and save babies born at less than 500 grams. Stabilization of these infants in the delivery room (DR) is one of the goals of the golden hour management. While some factors, including temperature management and airway care have standards, there is paucity of data on the optimal peak inspiratory pressure (PIP). The Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) recommends using the same inflation pressure of 20 cm to 25 cm H2O for preterm infants as used for term infants. Preterm lungs are not the same as term infants. Due to the smaller lung volume, capacities and dynamic pulmonary mechanics, these preterm infants are prone to pulmonary complications including pneumothorax. Therefore, there is need to use PIP judiciously in the DR. Methods and Results: In this brief report we present two cases of newborn infants that were born at less than 500 grams and were successfully resuscitated with a lower PIP. The success criteria in the DR were heart rate greater than 100 per minute and adequate oxygen saturations minute by minute per NRP guidelines with minimal use of supplemental oxygen. Conclusion: While we need good prospectively designed studies to document the ideal PIP for these extreme preterm infants, we suggest a PIP lower than the currently recommended may be sufficient for some extremely preterm infants.


Children ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 97
Author(s):  
Seung Yeon Kim ◽  
Gyu-Hong Shim ◽  
Georg M. Schmölzer

Approximately 0.1% for term and 10–15% of preterm infants receive chest compression (CC) in the delivery room, with high incidence of mortality and neurologic impairment. The poor prognosis associated with receiving CC in the delivery room has raised concerns as to whether specifically-tailored cardiopulmonary resuscitation methods are needed. The current neonatal resuscitation guidelines recommend a 3:1 compression:ventilation ratio; however, the most effective approach to deliver chest compression is unknown. We recently demonstrated that providing continuous chest compression superimposed with a high distending pressure or sustained inflation significantly reduced time to return of spontaneous circulation and mortality while improving respiratory and cardiovascular parameters in asphyxiated piglet and newborn infants. This review summarizes the current available evidence of continuous chest compression superimposed with a sustained inflation.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-28
Author(s):  
Arthur H. Parmelee ◽  
Franz J. Schulte

Twenty-five full-term, newborn infants and 22 small-for-date infants born at term had comparable nerve conduction velocities and were considered to be of equal neurological maturity. Twenty-six pre-term infants equal in weight to the small-for-date infants had significantly slower nerve conduction velocities and were considered on this basis more immature at birth than the term and small-for-date infants. All of these infants were given Gesell developmental tests at approximately 40 weeks of age by an examiner with no knowledge of their neonatal condition. The objective was to determine to what degree performance later in infancy is dependent on neurological maturity at birth. The full-term infants and the small-for-date infants performed at their age level with average developmental quotients of 99 and 96, respectively. The pre-term infants performed at less than their age from birth with an average D.Q. of 88; but, when their age was corrected for weeks of prematurity, the average D.Q. was 99. These findings substantiate the concept that performance on the Gesell schedules is dependent on time from conception rather than time from birth. Preterm infants should have their age determined from their expected date of birth for purposes of calculating a developmental quotient.


Resuscitation ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. e7-e8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Máximo Vento ◽  
Georg Schmölzer ◽  
Po-Yin Cheung ◽  
Neil Finer ◽  
Anne Lee Solevåg ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Beatriz Iglesias ◽  
Marí­a José Rodrí­guez ◽  
Esther Aleo ◽  
Enrique Criado ◽  
Jose Martí­nez-Orgado ◽  
...  

ObjectivesCurrent neonatal resuscitation guidelines suggest the use of ECG in the delivery room (DR) to assess heart rate (HR). However, reliability of ECG compared with pulse oximetry (PO) in a situation of bradycardia has not been specifically investigated. The objective of the present study was to compare HR monitoring using ECG or PO in a situation of bradycardia (HR <100 beats per minute (bpm)) during preterm stabilisation in the DR.Study designVideo recordings of resuscitations of infants <32 weeks of gestation were reviewed. HR readings in a situation of bradycardia (<100 bpm) at any moment during stabilisation were registered with both devices every 5 s from birth.ResultsA total of 29 episodes of bradycardia registered by the ECG in 39 video recordings were included in the analysis (n=29). PO did not detect the start of these events in 20 cases (69%). PO detected the start and the end of bradycardia later than the ECG (median (IQR): 5 s (0–10) and 5 s (0–7.5), respectively). A decline in PO accuracy was observed as bradycardia progressed so that by the end of the episode PO offered significantly lower HR readings than ECG.ConclusionsPO detects the start and recovery of bradycardia events slower and less accurately than ECG during stabilisation at birth of very preterm infants. ECG use in this scenario may contribute to an earlier initiation of resuscitation manoeuvres and to avoid unnecessary prolongation of resuscitation efforts after recovery.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 617-618
Author(s):  
CARLO CORCHIA ◽  
MARIA RUIU ◽  
MARCELLO ORZALESI

To the Editor.— Osborn et al1 have reported a positive association between breast-feeding and neonatal hyperbilirubinemia in full-term infants. To give further support to the findings of Osborn et al, we wish to report the results of two similar studies that have been completed in two different hospitals. The first study was carried out in the nursery of the Second School of Medicine of Naples.2 Rooming-in was practiced from 9 am to 12 pm, and during the day, breastfed babies were only offered a supplement of 5% dextrose in water when appropriate.


2016 ◽  
Vol 42 (11) ◽  
pp. 725-728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristiane Ribeiro Ambrosio ◽  
Adriana Sanudo ◽  
Alma M Martinez ◽  
Maria Fernanda Branco de Almeida ◽  
Ruth Guinsburg

Author(s):  
Sparsh Patel ◽  
Po-Yin Cheung ◽  
Anne Lee Solevåg ◽  
Keith J Barrington ◽  
C Omar Farouk Kamlin ◽  
...  

BackgroundThe 2015 neonatal resuscitation guidelines added ECG as a recommended method of assessment of an infant’s heart rate (HR) when determining the need for resuscitation at birth. However, a recent case report raised concerns about this technique in the delivery room.ObjectivesTo compare accuracy of ECG with auscultation to assess asystole in asphyxiated piglets.MethodsNeonatal piglets had the right common carotid artery exposed and enclosed with a real-time ultrasonic flow probe and HR was continuously measured and recorded using ECG. This set-up allowed simultaneous monitoring of HR via ECG and carotid blood flow (CBF). The piglets were exposed to 30 min normocapnic alveolar hypoxia followed by asphyxia until asystole, achieved by disconnecting the ventilator and clamping the endotracheal tube. Asystole was defined as zero carotid blood flow and was compared with ECG traces and auscultation for heart sounds using a neonatal/infant stethoscope.ResultsOverall, 54 piglets were studied with a median (IQR) duration of asphyxia of 325 (200-491) s. In 14 (26%) piglets, CBF, ECG and auscultation identified asystole. In 23 (43%) piglets, we observed no CBF and no audible heart sounds, while ECG displayed an HR ranging from 15 to 80/min. Sixteen (30%) piglets remained bradycardic (defined as HR of <100/min) after 10 min of asphyxia, identified by CBF, ECG and auscultation.ConclusionClinicians should be aware of the potential inaccuracy of ECG assessment during asphyxia in newborn infants and should rather rely on assessment using a combination of auscultation, palpation, pulse oximetry and ECG.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1959 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 1069-1101
Author(s):  
L. Stanley James

To improve our understanding of the respiratory distress syndrome, the importance of early examination of the infant, preferably at delivery, cannot be overemphasized. An attempt should be made to estimate clinically the degree of birth asphyxiation by a method such as the Apgar Score. The nature of respirations as well as the rate should be noted, particularly retractions and grunting. Decreased response to stimuli or poor tone, and a low blood pressure are significant signs. In this review, a number of comparisons have been drawn, including evidence from adult medicine or animal experiments. While these may appear unrelated, irrelevant or unduly speculative, they have been introduced for several purposes: to draw attention to aspects of the syndrome other than respiratory distress; to acquaint the general reader with more recent physiology which is deemed pertinent; and to emphasize the importance of relating one system to another, especially respiration to circulation. Many of the studies of respiratory function point to cardiac as well as pulmonary failure, notably the need for oxygen in the presence of a normal tidal and increased minute volume. Other circumstantial evidence of cardiac failure is abundant. Asphyxia appears to play a central role, affecting almost every system in the body and every phase of metabolism. It is probably responsible for the normal or low venous pressures occurring with a failing myocardium. It also accounts for the higher incidence of respiratory distress in the smaller prematures who are unable to achieve and maintain normal lung expansion. The syndrome is uncommon in larger full-term infants and in these instances is associated with obstetrical complications causing more severe degrees of birth asphyxia. The clinical picture includes a number of variations depending upon whether respiratory depression or symptoms relating to the central nervous or gastrointestinal systems predominate. Nevertheless, diagnosis of the respiratory distress syndrome should rely not on the presence or absence of membranes at necropsy, but rather on the history, symptoms and clinical signs. Inasmuch as asphyxia is not a disease, it would seem more logical to regard the syndrome as a failure in adaptation to extrauterine life. Failure to comprehend the many adaptations which newborn infants must make, both cardiopulmonary and biochemical, together with a narrow view centering only around the hyaline membranes, have for so many years cloaked this syndrome with mystery. Physiologic measurements in sick infants are difficult, and many of the determinations and calculations arduous. Some of the studies require confirmation, and others remain to be done, employing new or improved technics which are free from disadvantages of older methods. Because of many variables, caution should be exercised in drawing conclusions from a small number of cases. Early pioneering work has contributed greatly and has paved the way for future investigations. The value of serial studies correlated with careful clinical observations in order that the precise nature of a dynamic process may be more fully revealed has been clearly shown.


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