Acta paediatrica
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To determine cerebral blood flow using near infrared spectroscopy in extremely preterm infants undergoing high-frequency oscillatory ventilation during the first three days of life. Low cerebral blood flow has been associated with both intra-ventricular haemorrhage and periventricular leucomalacia. It is well established that cerebral blood flow increases over the first three days of life in extremely preterm infants who are conventionally ventilated with intermittent positive pressure ventilation. However, there is no information about cerebral blood flow in preterm babies undergoing high-frequency oscillatory ventilation. In addition, there are concerns that high-frequency oscillatory ventilation may be associated with an increased incidence of intra-ventricular haemorrhage in premature infants. ⋯ Cerebral blood flow is extremely low in this group of preterm babies. Despite this extremely low cerebral blood flow, the clinical outcome is good. There was an increase in cerebral blood flow and a corresponding increase in left ventricular output over the first few days of life.
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Supraventricular tachycardia: an incidental diagnosis in infants and difficult to prove in children.
To determine (a) the age distribution at first clinical supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) presentation; (b) the time interval between first clinical suspicion and electrocardiographic proof of SVT; c) the most indicative symptoms and signs of SVT; and (d) the SVT mechanism and its age distribution according to surface ECG. ⋯ In infants SVT is a chance finding; SVT can only be proven electrocardiographically with a median delay of 138 d, despite the presence of symptoms; SVT using a (concealed) accessory pathway is the most common mechanism.