Developmental medicine and child neurology
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Dev Med Child Neurol · Jan 2003
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialWhole-body cooling after perinatal asphyxia: a pilot study in term neonates.
In order to test the practicability and safety of whole-body cooling in term neonates with moderate-to-severe hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) and to report outcomes, a prospective pilot study was carried out in 25 term infants (median postmenstrual age 38 weeks, range 36 to 41 weeks; 20 males, five females). Whole-body cooling, to a target core temperature of 33 to 34 degrees C, started within 6 hours of birth and was maintained for 72 hours. Of the 25 newborn infants (19 Sarnat II and six Sarnat III, 18 outborn), 18 survived, including 13 (72%) with normal cerebral signal by MRI. ⋯ One patient had hypoxaemia with right-to-left shunting through the ductus arteriosus, and seven had limited meningeal or subdural bleeding. Whole-body cooling is feasible in term neonates, with no life-threatening adverse events. Improvements are needed to obtain stable hypothermia for 72 hours.