1. Evolving blood pressure dynamics for extremely preterm infants.
- Author
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Batton, B, Li, L, Newman, N S, Das, A, Watterberg, K L, Yoder, B A, Faix, R G, Laughon, M M, Stoll, B J, Higgins, R D, and Walsh, M C
- Subjects
ARTERIES ,BLOOD pressure ,PREMATURE infants ,INFANT development ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective:To examine changes in arterial blood pressure (ABP) after birth in extremely preterm infants.Study Design:Prospective observational study of infants 23
0/7 to 266/7 weeks gestational age (GA). Antihypotensive therapy use and ABP measurements were recorded for the first 24 h.Result:A cohort of 367 infants had 18 709 ABP measurements recorded. ABP decreased for the first 3 h, reached a nadir at 4 to 5 h and then increased at an average rate of 0.2 mm Hg h−1 . The rise in ABP from hour 4 to 24 was similar for untreated infants (n=164) and infants given any antihypotensive therapy (n=203), a fluid bolus (n=135) or dopamine (n=92). GA-specific trends were similar. ABP tended to be lower as GA decreased, but varied widely at each GA.Conclusion:ABP increased spontaneously over the first 24 postnatal hours for extremely preterm infants. The rate of rise in ABP did not change with antihypotensive therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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