Seminars in neonatology : SN
-
Survival rates in excess of 25% at 23 weeks' gestation and in excess of 50% at 24 weeks' gestation have been reported among live births in the 1990s within tertiary perinatal care centres in the USA and Australia. Decisions about medical management at these gestational ages can no longer be based merely on whether survival is possible. Relevant moral considerations include the primacy of the newborn's best interests, parental autonomy, physicians' duties of beneficence and non-maleficence, and distributive justice. ⋯ Moreover, the prevalence of major disabilities does not inform quality-of-life considerations adequately. Despite similar gestational age ranges over which the benefit:burden ratio of aggressive obstetric and neonatal care is questioned in developed countries, there is marked variation in the frequency with which it is provided within these ranges. This is understandable given the relevant moral values and the different ways in which competing values will be balanced by different individuals, cultures and societies; the increasing survival of extremely premature infants, but the persistence of high (but widely variable) prevalences of major disabilities reported among survivors and even higher prevalences of mild-to-moderate neurodevelopmental sequelae; our imperfect ability to estimate an individual extremely premature infant's prognosis; and the complexities of estimating the quality of life from the individual's own perspective.
-
Chronic lung disease (CLD) continues to be a significant complication in newborn infants undergoing mechanical ventilation for respiratory failure. Although the aetiology of CLD is multifactorial, specific factors related to mechanical ventilation, including barotrauma, volutrauma and atelectrauma, have been implicated as important aetiologic mechanisms. This article discusses the ways in which these factors might be manipulated by various mechanical ventilatory strategies to reduce ventilator-induced lung injury. These include continuous positive airway pressure, permissive hypercapnia, patient-triggered ventilation, volume-targeted ventilation, proportional assist ventilation, high-frequency ventilation and real-time monitoring.