Pediatric research
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Multicenter Study
Accuracy of weight estimation by the Broselow tape is substantially improved by including a visual assessment of body habitus.
BackgroundThe Broselow tape (BT) has been shown to estimate weight poorly primarily because of variations in body habitus. The manufacturers have suggested that a visual assessment of habitus may be used to increase its performance. This study evaluated the ability of habitus-modified models to improve the accuracy thereof. ⋯ The best dosing model improved dosing accuracy (doses within 10% of correct dose) from 52.0 to 69.6% and reduced critical dosing errors from 16.5 to 4.3%. The best weight-estimation model improved accuracy from 59.4 to 81.9% and reduced critical errors from 11.8 to 1.9%. ConclusionThe accuracy of the BT as a drug-dosing and weight-estimation device can be substantially improved by including an appraisal of body habitus in the methodology.
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BackgroundTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of injury-related death in children, with boys and children under 4 years of age having particularly poor outcomes. Cerebral autoregulation is often impaired after TBI, contributing to poor outcome. In prior studies on newborn pigs, phenylephrine (Phe) preferentially protected cerebral autoregulation in female but not in male subjects after TBI. ⋯ Phe protects autoregulation in both sexes after FPI, blocks ERK and endothelin, and decreases the number of necrotic neurons in male and female subjects after FPI. ConclusionsThese data indicate that Phe protects autoregulation and limits neuronal necrosis via blockage of ERK and endothelin after FPI in male and female subjects. Together with prior observations in newborn pigs where Phe protected autoregulation in female but not in male subjects, these data suggest that use of Phe to improve outcomes after TBI is both sex- and age-dependent.
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In neonates requiring chest compression (CC) during resuscitation, neonatal resuscitation program (NRP) recommends against relying on a single feedback device such as end-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) or saturations (SpO2) to determine return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) until more evidence becomes available. ⋯ In a large mammalian model of perinatal asphyxia, continuous ETCO2 monitoring predicted adequacy of CC and detected ROSC. These findings suggest ETCO2 in conjunction with other devices may be beneficial during CC and predict ROSC.
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Comparative Study Observational Study
Sex-specific associations between cerebrovascular blood pressure autoregulation and cardiopulmonary injury in neonatal encephalopathy and therapeutic hypothermia.
Cardiopulmonary injury is common in neonatal encephalopathy, but the link with cerebrovascular dysfunction is unknown. We hypothesized that alterations of cerebral autoregulation are associated with cardiopulmonary injury in neonates treated with therapeutic hypothermia (TH) for neonatal encephalopathy. ⋯ MAP deviation from MAPOPT may relate to cardiopulmonary injury after neonatal encephalopathy, and sex may modulate this relationship. Whereas MAP above MAPOPT may protect the brain and lungs in boys, it may be related to cardiopulmonary injury in girls. Future studies are needed to characterize the role of sex in these associations.
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Sepsis is an important cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Diagnosis and treatment of neonatal sepsis relies on clinical judgment and interpretation of nonspecific laboratory tests. In a prospective cohort, we measured inflammatory cytokines as a potential biomarker for neonatal sepsis. ⋯ IL-6 and IL-6/IL-10 outperformed C-reactive protein to diagnose neonatal sepsis. Of the cytokines studied, IL-6 was the most sensitive, whereas IL-6/IL-10 was the most specific predictor of neonatal sepsis.