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The Journal of pediatrics · Apr 2010
Comparative StudyLung volume and ventilation inhomogeneity in preterm infants at 15-18 months corrected age.
- Sven M Schulzke, Graham L Hall, Elizabeth A Nathan, Karen Simmer, Gary Nolan, and J Jane Pillow.
- School of Women's and Infant's Health, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia. sven.schulzke@health.wa.gov.au
- J. Pediatr. 2010 Apr 1; 156 (4): 542-9.e2.
ObjectiveTo assess whether lung volume and ventilation inhomogeneity in preterm infants at 15-18 months corrected age, and the change in these outcomes from the newborn period to 15-18 months corrected age, depend on gestational age (GA) at birth and the severity of neonatal lung disease.Study DesignPreterm (GA range, 23-32 weeks) and term healthy control infants were studied in quiet sedated sleep at 15-18 months corrected age by multiple breath washout with 5% sulfur hexafluoride using an ultrasonic flowmeter. Valid measurements were obtained from 58 infants. Multivariate and multilevel regression was used to analyze outcomes.ResultsFunctional residual capacity (FRC), lung clearance index, and first and second to zeroeth moment ratios were calculated. After accounting for body size at test, FRC at follow-up, and the increase in FRC from the newborn period to 15-18 months corrected age were positively associated with GA and negatively associated with the duration of endotracheal ventilation. Indices of ventilation inhomogeneity were unaltered by GA and the duration of endotracheal ventilation.ConclusionsIn very preterm infants, GA and the duration of endotracheal ventilation are independently associated with reduced lung volume and lung growth during infancy, although the effect size of these findings is small.Copyright 2010 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
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