Nurses caring for infants should be alert to tachycardia and irregularities of the heart rate, including those in the prenatal history, and should report them for evaluation. While all parents should be taught to watch for signs of illness, parents of infants with Wolff-Parkinson-White have additional learning needs, including recognizing early signs and symptoms of heart failure.
Although scoliosis at birth is rare, conditions at birth and in the newborn period predispose newborns to the development of scoliosis in later life. Scoliosis is congenital when associated with abnormal vertebral segmentation regardless of the age of diagnosis. Other conditions may predispose neonates to vertebral damage or the development of sustained uneven forces on the developing spine. Although it is difficult to know which newborns will progress to developing scoliosis, it is important to be aware of risk factors to provide anticipatory education for parents and to arrange appropriate follow-up after discharge. This article reviews the embryology of vertebral formation and risk factors for the development of scoliosis. The discussion includes the incidence, risk factors, genetics, associated problems, physical examination, and nursing implications of the infant with congenital scoliosis.
Exploring the decision to become an NNP in more geographically diverse populations will enhance understanding how neonatal intensive care unit nurses decide to become NNPs.
Neonatal drug utilization in very premature infants (gestational age (GA) 24-29
weeks), requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation at birth was registered as part of a
multicenter controlled clinical trial of high-dose versus low-dose bovine surfactant (initial
doses 100 mg/kg birth weight (b.w.) versus 50 mg/kg b.w.). Drug utilization during 4 weeks
after birth was analyzed in 164 infants (mean GA 27.2 ± 1.2 (SD) weeks, b.w. 970 ± 145 g
(SD)). More than half of the study infants received antibiotics (98.8%), sedatives and analgesics
(91.5%), sodium bicarbonate (78%), solutions for volume replacement (62.8%), methylxanthines
(56.7%) and catecholamines (52.4%). It may be concluded that the pattern of
drug usage indicates a high incidence of proven or suspected infections and circulatory and
respiratory disorders reflecting the high-risk state of study infants.
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