A new method of surfactant application was associated with a lower prevalence of mechanical ventilation and better pulmonary outcome. A prospective controlled trial is required to determine whether this approach is superior to standard care.
Changes in dynamic lung compliance during inspiration and expiration cannot be modeled accurately with conventional algorithms. We developed a simple method to analyze pressure-volume (P/V) relationships under condition of nonlinearity (APVNL) and tested it in a lung model with known resistance and nonlinear P/V relationship. In addition, pulmonary mechanics in 22 infants, 11 of them with nonlinear P/V relationships, were analyzed with the new method. The findings were compared with those obtained by a recently introduced algorithm, multiple linear regression analysis (MLR) of the equation of motion. The APVNL method described the changing compliance (C) of the lung model accurately, whereas the MLR method underestimated C especially in the first half of the breath. In infants the MLR method gave highly variable, often nonphysiological C values in the beginning of a breath. In contrast, the coefficient of variability of measurements obtained by the APVNL method was significantly smaller (p < 0.02), and the indices of model-fit showed better agreement between calculated and observed pressure than for the MLR method (p < 0.02). We conclude that the APVNL method accurately describes nonlinear P/V relationships present during spontaneous breathing or mechanical ventilation. The method may be helpful in identifying and preventing pulmonary overdistention.
A variable white blood cell count without clinical signs of sepsis or hematological disorders is often observed in newborns. The intention of this study was to investigate the effect of mode of delivery on hematologic measurements, especially white blood cell count in the umbilical vein. 121 term newborns were investigated prospectively. They were subdivided into three groups: spontaneous births (n = 83), vacuum extraction (n = 19) and cesarean sections (n = 19). The mode of delivery influenced the leukocyte count and the precursor cells. The mean leukocyte counts after spontaneous birth (14.6 ± 4.0 leukocytes/nl) and after vacuum extraction (16.6 ± 7.4 leukocytes/nl) were significantly higher than after cesarean section (12.1 ± 4.4 leukocytes/nl; p < 0.05). The precursors of leukocytes were also significantly higher in infants with vacuum extraction (1.06 ± 0.83 cells/nl) than in spontaneously delivered infants (0.54 ± 0.47 cells/nl). An inverse relationship between the number of leukocytes and the arterial cord blood pH was observed (p < 0.05). No significant differences were observed in the effect of mode of delivery on erythrocyte and platelet counts.
The first child of consanguineous parents presented with failure to thrive and feeding problems at age 6 weeks. Important laboratory findings were low plasma sodium and elevated potassium and renin. Salt wasting was caused by an enzymatic defect in the terminal aldosterone biosynthesis. The biochemical diagnosis of corticosterone methyloxidase (CMO) deficiency type II was established on the basis of plasma multisteroid analysis, showing a pathologic increase of 18-OH-corticosterone/aldosterone ratio. Sequence analysis of the CYP11B2 gene which encodes aldosterone synthase (P450c11Aldo), the enzyme required for the terminal steps in aldosterone biosynthesis, revealed a hitherto undescribed homozygous deletion of codon 173. CYP11B2 is polymorphic at this position, encoding arginine or lysine. Both parents were heterozygous carriers of the mutation. Amino acid residue 173 in P450c11Aldo is positioned in α-helix D. We presume that the secondary structure of the enzyme is changed by the single amino acid deletion. This report describes a novel mutation in the CYP11B2 gene, the third known mutation associated with CMO deficiency type II.
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