ISSUES AND PURPOSE. This study compared clinical and economic outcomes for infants who were exclusively fed breast milk and infants who were fed commercial formula.
DESIGN AND METHODS. A retrospective medical record review from a regional neonatal intensive care unit (N = 80) using consultation logs from the lactation coordinator and a matched sample of formula‐fed infants.
RESULTS. Neither clinical (weight gain, length of stay, days of parenteral nutrition) nor economic outcomes (direct variable costs, net revenue) differed significantly between the groups.
PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS. While it may not be possible to demonstrate sufficient cost savings while the infant resides within the NICU to justify a lactation coordinator, long‐term clinical and economic outcomes may be sensitive to this specialized nursing service.
We describe the clinical and biochemical findings in a neonate requiring multiple blood transfusions and phototherapy for alloimmune hemolytic anemia and unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia, respectively. In this newborn, a severe photosensitivity reaction developed and laboratory testing revealed elevated serum and urine porphyrins at the time of the eruption. The cause of the transient porphyrinemia was likely multifactorial. Possible mechanisms include poor hepatic metabolism and reticulocyte hemolysis. However, the exact pathogenesis remains unclear at this time.
The case study describes an infant who was diagnosed 24 hours after birth with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, a cognitive malformation of the heart. He received a heart transplant 30 days later. The infant received breast milk before transplant and successfully breastfed after the transplant until the age of 13 months. For the 5 years since the transplant, he has had no complications associated with hypoplastic left heart syndrome.
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