This study confirms the normal range for penile length of premature male infants 30-36 weeks and defines the normal range <30 weeks. This should prove useful to paediatricians, paediatric surgeons and endocrinologists dealing with the increasing number of surviving male infants <30 weeks in whom penile size is questioned.
SUMMARYEfficacy of oral, prophylactic erythromycin in reducing the time to establish full enteral feeds (150 ml/kg/day) was assessed in neonates <32 weeks, ready for enteral feeds. Seventy‐three consecutive neonates were randomised to receive oral erythromycin ethyl succinate (n=36) or placebo (n=37) in a double‐blind trial until full enteral feeds or 14 days of therapy were reached. A prospectively designed feeding regimen, including plan of action for signs of feed intolerance, was common for all enrolled neonates. The median gestational age, birth weight and postnatal age at start of feeds were 29 versus 30 weeks (p=0.40), 1232 versus 1280 g (p=0.96) and 5 versus 5 days (p=0.84) for erythromycin and placebo group, respectively. Time to achieve full feeds was not significantly different in the two groups. (median times: erythromycin 93.5 versus placebo 104 hours, p=0.60). Erythromycin‐related side‐effects did not occur.
We report a case of a tubo-ovarian abscess infected with serotype A 19-year-old Nepalese woman presented to a hospital in Kathmandu with lower abdominal pain, constipation, fever and a non-healing, suppurative surgical wound from an emergency caesarian section performed 2 months previously at 37 weeks of pregnancy. She also had an exploratory laparotomy for an appendix perforation with peritonitis at 25 weeks of gestation. Her wound infection did not respond to cloxacillin and she had an exploratory laparotomy, and a tubo-ovarian abscess was found from which was isolated. She had a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and responded to 14 days of chloramphenicol. A tubo-ovarian abscess is a rare complication of enteric fever.
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