2022
DOI: 10.3390/children9121800
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Postnatal Growth Faltering: Growth and Height Improvement at Two Years in Children with Very Low Birth Weight between 2002–2017

Abstract: The prevalence of postnatal growth faltering (PGF) in preterm infants with very low birth weight (VLBW) (<1500 g) is a universal problem. Growth improvement is expected as neonatal care is optimized. Objectives: To determine if there has been a decrease in the prevalence of PGF and an improvement in height at 2 years in appropriate for gestational age VLBW children in the last two decades. Methods: Clinical descriptive retrospective analysis of neonatal somatometry at birth and at two-year corrected age in … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…We are not only talking about malnutrition by default but also by excess. The difficulties also lie in knowing what the optimum growth is for these children (there are different definitions for talking about adequate extrauterine growth), what the goal is, and how to achieve this optimal growth [21,22]. The most important thing is to know what contributions of macro-and micro-nutrients, in terms of both quality and quantity, are adequate to reach these without putting the children at subsequent metabolic risk.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We are not only talking about malnutrition by default but also by excess. The difficulties also lie in knowing what the optimum growth is for these children (there are different definitions for talking about adequate extrauterine growth), what the goal is, and how to achieve this optimal growth [21,22]. The most important thing is to know what contributions of macro-and micro-nutrients, in terms of both quality and quantity, are adequate to reach these without putting the children at subsequent metabolic risk.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%