Carboxyhaemoglobin levels were measured in 250 consecutive, normal, term newborns and in a group of 75 severely jaundiced infants in an effort to assess the role of haemolysis in non-specific neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia--"Physiologic jaundice"-as well as in severe jaundice of various etiologies. In normal newborns a significant correlation (r=0.3293, p less than 0.001) was found between third-day carboxyhaemoglobin and serum bilirubin levels. Significant correlations were also found between the cord and third day values for carboxyhaemoglobin (infants of non-smoking mothers) for reticulocyte count, and for serum bilirubin. Third day haemoglobin showed no correlation with any of the other parameters including cord haemoglobin. Of the infants with third day carboxyhaemoglobin up to 0.75%, 1.7% had third day serum bilirubin values above 16.0 mg/100 ml. The corresponding percentage for the infants with carboxyhaemoglobin above 0.75% was 6.1%. It is concluded that increased rates of haemolysis due to as yet unspecified caused play an important role in the non-specific hyperbilirubinaemia of normal term newborns. As expected, high levels of carboxyhaemoglobin were found in infants with severe jaundice due to Rhesus and ABO haemolytic disease and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency but also in jaundiced prematures and in Greek infants with severe jaundice of unknown cause.
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