Early brain and abdominal oxygenation in extremely low birth weight infants.

Authors: 
V.Y. Chock; E. Smith; S. Tan; B. Ball; A. Das; S.R. Hintz; H. Kirpalani; E.F. Bell; L.F. Chalak; W.A. Carlo; M. Cotten; J.A. Widness; K.A. Kennedy; R.K. Ohls; R.B. Seabrook; R.M. Patel; A.R. Laptook; T. Mancini; G.M. Sokol; M.C. Walsh; B.A. Yoder; B.B. Poindexter; S. Chawla; C.T. D'Angio; R.D. Higgins; K.P. Van Meurs; Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Neonatal Research Network
Abstract: 

BACKGROUND: Extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants are at risk for end-organ hypoxia and ischemia. Regional tissue oxygenation of the brain and gut as monitored with near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) may change with postnatal age, but normal ranges are not well defined.

METHODS: A prospective study of ELBW preterm infants utilized NIRS monitoring to assess changes in cerebral and mesenteric saturation (Csat and Msat) over the first week after birth. This secondary study of a multicenter trial comparing hemoglobin transfusion thresholds assessed cerebral and mesenteric fractional tissue oxygen extraction (cFTOE and mFTOE) and relationships with perinatal variables.

RESULTS: In 124 infants, both Csat and Msat declined over the first week, with a corresponding increase in oxygen extraction. With lower gestational age, lower birth weight, and 5-min Apgar score ≤5, there was a greater increase in oxygen extraction in the brain compared to the gut. Infants managed with a lower hemoglobin transfusion threshold receiving ≥2 transfusions in the first week had the lowest Csat and highest cFTOE (p 

Citation: 

Chock VY, Smith E, Tan S, et al. "Early brain and abdominal oxygenation in extremely low birth weight infants." Pediatr Res. 2022.PubMed

Publication type: 
Journal Article
Year: 
2022
CPQCC publication: 
Yes
PubMed ID: 
35513716