169 research outputs found

    Early Skin-to-Skin Contact in Preterm Infants: Is It Safe? An Italian Experience

    Get PDF
    Background: Skin-to-skin contact (SSC) is one of the four components of kangaroo care (KC) and is also a valued alternative to incubators in low-income countries. SSC has also become a standard of care in high-income countries because of its short- and long-term benefits and its positive effect on infant growth and neurodevelopmental outcome. However, barriers in the implementation of SSC, especially with preterm infants, are common in NICUs because parents and health care professionals can perceive it as potentially risky for the clinical stability of preterm infants. Previous studies have assessed safety before and during SSC by monitoring vital parameters during short-time intervals. Aims: To demonstrate the safety of early SSC in preterm infants during at least 90 min intervals. Design: Prospective observational monocentric study. Methods: Preterm infants born between June 2018 and June 2020 with a gestational age of ≤33 weeks and a birth weight of <2000 g were monitored while performing an SSC session during the first three weeks of life. Infants with necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis, and congenital malformations on mechanical ventilation or with more than five apneas in the hour before SSC were excluded. Continuous oxygen saturation (SaO2), heart rate (HR), and respiratory rate (RR) were registered during an SSC session and in the hour before. The minimum duration of an SSC session was 90 min. Information regarding postmenstrual age (PMA), body weight, respiratory support, presence of a central venous catheter and the onset of sepsis within 72 h after a session was collected. Two physicians, blinded to infant conditions and the period of analysis (before or during SSC), evaluated desaturation episodes (SaO2 < 85%, >15 s), bradycardia (HR < 100, >15 s) and apneas (pause in breathing > 20 s associated with desaturation and/or bradycardia). A Wilcoxon rank sum test was used for the statistical analysis. Results: In total, 83 episodes of SSC were analyzed for a total of 38 infants. The mean gestational age at birth was 29 weeks (range 23–33 weeks). Median PMA, days of life, and body weight at SSC were 31 weeks (range 25–34 weeks), 10 days (range 1–20 days), and 1131 g (range 631–2206 g), respectively. We found that 77% of infants were on respiratory support and 47% of them had a central venous catheter (umbilical or peripherally inserted central catheter) during SSC. The total duration of desaturation, bradycardia, and the number of apneas were not statistically different during the SSC session and the hour before. No catheter dislocation or ruptures were reported. Conclusions: These findings highlighted the safety of early SSC in preterm infants and the possibility of performing it in an intensive care setting in the first weeks of life. In addition, these findings should reassure health care professionals offering this practice as a standard of care. SSC plays a key role in the care of preterm infants due to its short- and long-term positive benefits, and it deserves to be increasingly offered to infants and their parents

    A Surface Electromyogram Evaluation of the Postural Freedom Effects in Laparoscopic Surgery

    Full text link
    [EN] It has been demonstrated that laparoscopic procedures benefit patients in terms of recovery time, exposure to infections and trauma. Nevertheless, it increases the number of problems for the surgeons, including the frequency and duration of awkward postures for surgeons. The repetition of these movements is considered the main cause for musculoskeletal disorders in surgeons' upper limbs. The goal of this study is to evaluate the muscular activity and muscular fatigue effect produced by both, a conventional instrument and an instrument provided with the Postural Freedom (PF) feature; which consists in a ball socket articulation that allows a variable handle-to-shaft angle, on a conventional laparoscopic pistol-grip handle. Seventeen participants were evaluated during a static simulation using both instruments. Surface electromyography was used to compare the instruments in terms of muscular activity in each target position and muscular fatigue produced in the muscles trapezius, deltoids, biceps, and flexor carpi radialis. Trapezius and deltoids were the muscles most affected. Entrance and exit targets and targets facing the participants showed the higher muscular activity values. The PF prototype reduced muscular activity in all the muscles and in the majority of the target positions showing a reduction greater than 70% of the activity required by the trapezius and deltoid muscles in comparison to the conventional tool. Muscular fatigue was produced by both instruments but it presented lower frequency values with PF prototype. The results indicated that the use of conventional instruments impacts negatively on muscular activity during laparoscopic procedures, in terms of positions adopted. The PF feature in laparoscopic instrumentation reduced the muscular activity and also decreased the signals of muscular fatigue in the muscles evaluated in comparison with the conventional tool.Pace-Bedetti, HM.; MartĂ­nez-De-Juan, JL.; Conejero Rodilla, A.; Prats-Boluda, G. (2019). A Surface Electromyogram Evaluation of the Postural Freedom Effects in Laparoscopic Surgery. IEEE. 3143-3146. https://doi.org/10.1109/EMBC.2019.88579193143314

    The effect of postural freedom to increase the neutral positions during laparoscopic surgery

    Full text link
    [EN] Laparoscopic technique has demonstrated numerous advantages compared to open conventional surgery. Nevertheless, this procedure increases the surgeons fatigue and thus, the potential to commit errors that may harm the patient during the operation. The post-surgery pain is also augmented because the surgeons are forced to adopt non-neutral postures during the practice. This study reveals how a postural freedom element could help surgeons to improve the postural hygiene. During this study, thirteen participants with and without previous experience in laparoscopic surgery performed a test with two instruments: a prototype that implement this postural freedom concept and a conventional fixed instrument. The results obtained indicate that the postural freedom element allows the participants to maintain neutral positions during greatest part of the experiment and suggest that the implementation of an articulated element could increases the neutral positions adopted during a real laparoscopic procedure. The use of the postural freedom concept allowed to the participants to reduce the awkward positions during upper limb motions and to reduce displacements, avoiding extreme abductions that are common with the conventional fixed instruments.Pace-Bedetti, HM.; Dolz, JF.; MartĂ­nez-De-Juan, JL.; Conejero Rodilla, A. (2019). The effect of postural freedom to increase the neutral positions during laparoscopic surgery. International Journal on Interactive Design and Manufacturing (IJIDeM). 13(2):627-631. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12008-018-00527-6S62763113

    Infectious Risks Related to Umbilical Venous Catheter Dwell Time and Its Replacement in Newborns: A Narrative Review of Current Evidence

    Get PDF
    The use of umbilical venous catheters (UVCs) has become the standard of care in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) to administer fluids, medications and parenteral nutrition. However, it is well known that UVCs can lead to some serious complications, both mechanical and infective, including CLABSI (Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infections). Most authors recommend removing UVC within a maximum of 14 days from its placement. However, the last Infusion Therapy Standards of Practice (INS) guidelines recommends limiting the UVC dwell time to 7 to 10 days, to reduce risks of infectious and thrombotic complications. These guidelines also suggest as an infection prevention strategy to remove UVC after 4 days, followed by the insertion of a PICC if a central line is still needed. Nevertheless, the maximum UVC dwell time to reduce the risk of CLABSI is still controversial, as well as the time of its replacement with a PICC. In this study we reviewed a total of 177 articles, found by using the PubMed database with the following search strings: “UVC AND neonates”, “(neonate* OR newborn*) AND (UVC OR central catheter*) AND (infection*)”. We also analyze the INS guidelines to provide the reader an updated overview on this topic. The purpose of this review is to give updated information on CVCs infectious risks by examining the literature in this field. These data could help clinicians in deciding the best time to remove or to replace the UVC with a PICC, to reduce CLABSIs risk. Despite the lack of strong evidence, the risk of CLABSI seems to be minimized when UVC is removed/replaced within 7 days from insertion and this indication is emerging from more recent and larger studies

    Fetal hepatic calcification in severe KAT6A (Arboleda-Tham) syndrome

    Get PDF
    : Arboleda-Tham syndrome (ARTHS, MIM 616268) is a rare genetic disease, due to a pathogenic variant of Lysine (K) Acetyltransferase 6A (KAT6A) with autosomal dominant inheritance. Firstly described in 2015, ARTHS is one of the more common causes of undiagnosed syndromic intellectual disability. Due to extreme phenotypic variability, ARTHS clinical diagnosis is challenging, mostly at early stage of the disease. Moreover, because of the wide and unspecific spectrum of ARTHS, identification of the syndrome during prenatal life rarely occurs. Therefore, reported cases of KAT6A syndrome have been identified primarily through clinical or research exome sequencing in a gene-centric approach. In order to expands the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of ARTHS, we describe prenatal and postnatal findings in a patient with a novel frameshift KAT6A pathogenic variant, displaying a severe phenotype with previously unreported clinical features

    Foot-to-Foot Contact Among Initial Goal-Directed Movements Supports the Prognostic Value of Fidgety Movements in HIE-Cooled Infants

    Get PDF
    Background: Few studies conducted to date have observed general movements in infants affected by hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) who underwent therapeutic hypothermia. We investigated whether foot-to-foot contact (FF) could support the predictive value of fidgety movements (FMs) in infants affected by HIE and treated with brain cooling. Methods: Spontaneous motility was video recorded for 3–5 min at 12 weeks post-term age in 58 full-term newborn infants affected by perinatal asphyxia who were cooled due to moderate to severe HIE. FF and FMs were blindly scored by three independent observers. At 24 months, each patient underwent a neurological examination by Amiel-Tison and Grenier. Results: At 24 months, 47 infants had developed typically at neurological examination, eight had developed mild motor impairment, and three developed cerebral palsy (CP). At 12 weeks, 34 (58.6%) infants had shown normal FMs, four of whom developed mild motor impairment. Twenty-four infants (41.4%) exhibited abnormal or no FMs, four of whom developed mild motor impairment and three developed CP. FF was present in 20 infants (34.5%), two of whom developed mild motor impairment. FF was absent in 38 infants (65.5%), six of whom developed mild motor impairment and three developed CP. Both FMs and FF, considered separately, were 100% sensitive for predicting CP at 24 months, but only 61 and 36%, respectively, were specific. Summing the two patterns together, the specificity increases to 73%, considering only CP as an abnormal outcome, and increases to 74% when considering CP plus mild motor impairment. Unexpectedly, fidgety movements were absent in 24 infants with typical motor outcomes, 17 of whom showed a typical motor outcome. Conclusions: FF is already part of motor repertoire at 12 weeks and allows a comparison of spontaneous non-voluntary movements (FMs) to pre-voluntary movements (FF). FF supports FMs for both sensitivity and specificity. A second video recording at 16–18 weeks, when pedipulation is present in healthy infants, is suggested: it may better define the presence or absence of goal-directed motility

    Can Fraction of Inspired Oxygen Predict Extubation Failure in Preterm Infants?

    Get PDF
    Background: Prolonged mechanical ventilation in preterm infants may cause complications. We aimed to analyze the variables affecting extubation outcomes in preterm infants at high risk of extubation failure. Methods: This was a single-center, observational, retrospective study. Extubation failure was defined as survival with the need for reintubation within 72 h. Successfully extubated neonates (group 1) were compared to those with failed extubation (group 2). Multivariate logistic regression analysis evaluated factors that predicted extubation outcomes. Results: Eighty infants with a birth weight under 1000 g and/or gestational age (GA) under 28 weeks were included. Extubation failure occurred in 29 (36.2%) and success in 51 (63.8%) neonates. Most failures (75.9%) occurred within 24 h. Pre-extubation inspired oxygen fraction (FiO2) of 27% had a sensitivity of 58.6% and specificity of 64.7% for extubation failure. Post-extubation FiO2 of 32% had a sensitivity of 65.5% and specificity of 62.8% for failure. Prolonged membrane rupture (PROM) and high GA were associated with extubation success in multivariate logistic regression analysis. Conclusions: High GA and PROM were associated with extubation success. Pre-and post-extubation FiO2 values were not significantly predictive of extubation failure. Further studies should evaluate if overall assessment, including ventilatory parameters and clinical factors, can predict extubation success in neonates
    • …
    corecore