To evaluate the influence of echocardiographic examination in the clinical management of the sick neonate, 241 patients, admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit of a tertiary referral center that had echocardiograms with data available for review, were enrolled in a retrospective study. Asymptomatic murmurs (45%) followed by extracardiac anomalies/dysmorphic features (24%) were the most common clinical indications for requesting an echocardiogram. Congenital structural abnormalities (33%), hemodynamically significant patent arterial duct (3%), persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (6%), and left ventricular dysfunction (3%) were the echocardiographic findings that subgrouped as structural or functional abnormalities. Patent oval foramen and hemodynamically nonsignificant patent arterial duct (20%) and physiologic pulmonary artery stenosis (1%) were categorized as normal structural group. Thirty-four percent of neonates had normal heart anatomy. This investigation changed the clinical management in at least 66% of newborns scanned, including emergency surgical intervention for 7%, medical treatment for 22%, and routine cardiologic follow-up for 37% of patients. Asymptomatic murmur in our critically ill neonates has been associated with a higher incidence of cardiac disease. Hence, echocardiography is an important tool for diagnosis of cardiac abnormalities that can influence the management and outcome of the sick newborn in the intensive care unit. A preliminary echocardiogram performed by the neonatologist under the supervision of a pediatric cardiologist for interpretation and review is an alternate when there is not a cardiologist "in house."
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