SUMMARY Thirty nine very low birthweight neonates (with a birth weight of 820 to 1500 g and gestation of 27 to 34 weeks) who required total parenteral nutrition were randomly assigned to one of three regimens of administration of fat emulsion for a period of eight days. Groups 1 and 2 received the emulsion at a constant rate over 24 and 16 hours, respectively, beginning with a daily dosage of 1 g/kg and increasing daily by 1 g/kg to a maximum of 4 g/kg. Group 3 received the emulsion at a constant rate of 4 g/kg a day over 24 hours. Plasma concentrations of free fatty acids and serum concentrations of total bilirubin, apparent unbound bilirubin, and albumin were measured at regular intervals. Effects of the three regimens on serum bilirubin measurements were determined. The regimen of fat infusion and rate of infusion seemed to have no effect on serum concentrations of total and apparent unbound bilirubin, although there was a trend towards greater variability in apparent unbound concentrations with the intermittent regimen.
Plasma concentrations of various lipid fractions (total lipids, free glycerol, true triglycerides, free fatty acids, and cholesterol) were studied in 20 normally grown neonates ranging in birthweight from 820 to 1500 gm and in gestational age from 28 to 34 weeks. They were subdivided into three weight categories: 750 to 999, 1000 to 1249, and 1250 to 1500 gm. A lipid emulsion was infused at a constant rate over 24 hours, beginning with an hourly infusion rate of 0.04 gm/kg and increasing each day by 0.04 gm/kg up to a maximum of 0.16 gm/kg. Neonates who weighed less than 1000 gm had higher mean plasma concentrations of total lipids and free glycerol at hourly infusion rates of 0.08 and 0.16 and of triglycerides and free fatty acids at hourly infusion rate of 0.16 gm/kg than their heavier peers. These data suggest that extreme caution be used when administering parenteral fat emulsions to neonates who weigh less than 1000 gm and that we need to monitor plasma closely for signs of hyperlipemia.
Tolerance to parenterally administered fat emulsions was studied in 45 normally grown neonates ranging from 820 to 1550 gm in birthweight, from 27 to 34 weeks in gestational age, and from 2 to 10 days postnatal age. Concentrations of total lipids, free glycerol, true triglycerides, free fatty acids, and cholesterol in plasma were studied over an 8-day period. The aim was to determine whether the concentrations of any one lipid fraction could be used to predict those of other fractions. With 650 pairs of data being correlated, the best correlation coefficients were obtained between total lipids and triglycerides (r = 0.67), total lipids and cholesterol (r = 0.63), free glycerol and free fatty acids (r = 0.55), total lipids and free fatty acids (r = 0.54), and triglycerides and free fatty acids (r = 0.50). Although all correlation coefficients were highly significant statistically (P less than 0.001), the very large standard errors precluded using any of these relationships to make clinical predictions. Problems and limitations of currently available techniques are discussed in order to provide a lead for further research.
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