Acta paediatrica
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The aim of this study was to measure plasma atrial natriuretic peptide in preterm infants with a patent ductus arteriosus before and after closure with indomethacin. Atrial natriuretic peptide was measured in 28 preterm infants with clinical and echocardiographic evidence of a patent ductus arteriosus and in eight preterm infants who did not develop clinical evidence of a patent ductus arteriosus. Plasma concentration of atrial natriuretic peptide was measured by radioimmunoassay. ⋯ The patent ductus arteriosus closed spontaneously in four infants (atrial natriuretic peptide median level 152 pg/ml, range 61-495 pg/ml). In the eight infants without patent ductus arteriosus, atrial natriuretic peptide level was median 224 pg/ml (range 38-876 pg/ml). Measurement of plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentration has a role in predicting when indomethacin treatment is indicated.
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The efficacy of vitamin K prophylaxis (1 mg im or sc, or 1-2 mg orally both given as a single dose at birth) in the prevention of vitamin K deficiency bleeding in early infancy was estimated in Germany during a 15-month period between 1988 and 1989. Cases were identified by a survey of all paediatric hospitals and population denominators by a survey of all obstetric hospitals. Response rates were 85% and 68%, respectively. ⋯ The estimated efficacy of single parenteral administration of vitamin K versus no prophylaxis was 96.7% (95% confidence interval: 74-99.6%) and for single oral administration versus no prophylaxis 80.4% (9.1-95.6%). Single parenteral vitamin K prophylaxis gave substantial protection against vitamin K deficiency bleeding in early infancy. Single oral prophylaxis appeared to be less effective, although the difference was not significant, as indicated by the wide overlap of the respective 95% confidence intervals.
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The classical form of thiamine deficiency in children is comprised of peripheral neuropathy, encephalopathy and high-output cardiac failure, predominantly right-sided. "Shoshin beriberi" cardiac failure has a different presentation, with vasoconstriction, hypotension and severe metabolic acidosis. A three-month breast-fed infant developed these features (biochemical tests confirmed the diagnosis). His mother, although non-symptomatic, had biochemical evidence of thiamine deficiency.